Cajun Shrimp Foil Packets
Juicy shrimp, smoky sausage, and sweet corn turn into something bigger than the sum of their parts when they’re cooked sealed inside foil. The shrimp stays tender, the vegetables pick…
Tip: save now, cook later.Juicy shrimp, smoky sausage, and sweet corn turn into something bigger than the sum of their parts when they’re cooked sealed inside foil. The shrimp stays tender, the vegetables pick up the Cajun seasoning without drying out, and the butter melts into a light sauce that coats everything in the packet. When you open one at the table, the steam hits first, then the garlic, paprika, and lemon-ready richness. That combination keeps this meal in regular rotation because it feels special without asking much from you.
The trick is balance. Shrimp cooks fast, so the foil packet has to trap enough heat to finish the vegetables without leaving the seafood rubbery. Slicing the corn into rounds helps it cook in the same window as the shrimp, and using Andouille adds fat and smoke that keeps the packet from tasting flat. A little olive oil helps the seasoning cling, while the butter goes in at the end so it melts instead of disappearing into the bottom before the packet is sealed.
Below, I’ll walk through the timing that keeps the shrimp plump, the seasoning blend that gives the packets their backbone, and a few smart ways to adjust the heat or swap ingredients without losing the point of the dish.
The shrimp stayed plump and the corn came out perfectly tender in the same amount of time. I used the oven method and the butter mixed with the Cajun seasoning made the whole packet taste like it had been simmering for hours.
Save these Cajun shrimp foil packets for the nights when you want smoky shrimp, buttery sausage, and almost no cleanup.
The Mistake That Makes Shrimp Turn Rubbery in Foil Packets
Most foil packet shrimp goes wrong because everything gets cooked as if it needs the same amount of time. It doesn’t. Shrimp is done fast, while corn and sausage need the head start from heat, fat, and a little time in the packet to soften and flavor the rest of the ingredients. If the shrimp is tiny, it can overcook before the vegetables are ready; if the packets are crammed too full, the food steams unevenly and never really roasts at all.
The fix is in the cut size and the seal. Cutting the corn into rounds helps it cook through in the same window as the shrimp, and keeping the vegetables in a fairly even layer lets hot steam move through the packet instead of getting trapped in one dense mound. Heavy-duty foil matters here because thin foil can tear when you lift or turn the packets, which is how the juices escape and the seasoning gets left behind.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Packet
Four ingredients carry the whole dish: shrimp, Andouille, butter, and the Cajun seasoning. The shrimp gives you the clean seafood sweetness, but it needs the sausage and butter to keep it from tasting lean. Andouille brings smoke, salt, and fat; if you can’t find it, kielbasa works, but the packet will be milder and less peppery. Butter isn’t just for richness — it melts with the seasoning and turns into the coating that ties the whole packet together.
- Large shrimp — Use large or extra-large shrimp so they stay juicy in the packet. Smaller shrimp cook too quickly and can turn stiff by the time the vegetables are tender.
- Andouille sausage — This is where most of the smoky depth comes from. Slice it into 1/2-inch coins so it heats through without drying out.
- Corn on the cob — Cutting the ears into rounds helps them cook faster and absorb the seasoning. Frozen corn can work in a pinch, but it won’t give you the same sweet, juicy bite.
- Butter and olive oil — Olive oil helps the seasoning stick before cooking, while butter finishes the packet with moisture and a glossy sauce. If you only use oil, the packet tastes flatter.
- Cajun seasoning blend — Smoked paprika, thyme, oregano, and cayenne build the backbone here. Store-bought Cajun seasoning works too, but check the salt level before adding extra so the packets don’t end up too salty.
Building the Packets So the Shrimp and Vegetables Finish Together
Mix the seasoning before the seafood goes in
Stir the spice blend together first so the heat and salt distribute evenly. If you sprinkle it in unevenly, some bites will be all smoke and pepper while others taste bland. The shrimp and vegetables should look lightly coated, not buried. The oil gives the seasoning enough grip to cling to the cut surfaces before the foil traps everything inside.
Layer the filling with enough room for steam
Divide the mixture into four packets and keep each pile in the center of the foil rather than spreading it edge to edge. The food needs space to steam and move a little as it cooks. If you overfill, the packets won’t seal cleanly and the vegetables at the bottom cook faster than the shrimp on top. A rough mound in the center works better than a flat layer.
Seal tightly and cook until the shrimp just turn opaque
Crimp the foil all the way around so steam stays inside, then cook on the grill or in the oven until the shrimp are pink and curled and the corn is tender at the bite. Don’t leave them in much longer than that. The carryover heat inside the sealed packet keeps cooking after you pull them off the heat, and that’s where shrimp can go from tender to dry in a matter of minutes. Let the packets rest briefly before opening so the sauce settles back over the filling instead of rushing out immediately.
Three Smart Ways to Change These Cajun Shrimp Foil Packets
Make It Dairy-Free Without Losing the Finish
Swap the butter for another tablespoon of olive oil or use a dairy-free butter with a clean, neutral flavor. You’ll lose a little of the round, rich finish that butter gives the packet, but the spices and sausage still carry the dish well. Add the lemon wedges at the table to bring back some brightness.
Skip the Sausage for a Lighter Packet
Leave out the Andouille and add a little extra olive oil plus another pinch of smoked paprika and black pepper. The dish turns cleaner and more shrimp-forward, but you lose the smoky fat that keeps the seasoning from tasting sharp. Add sliced mushrooms or extra zucchini if you want more volume.
Use the Oven When the Grill Isn’t an Option
Bake the packets on a rimmed sheet pan at 425°F and keep the foil sealed until the shrimp are fully pink. The oven gives you even heat and works well when the weather won’t cooperate, though you won’t get the faint char that the grill adds. The flavor is still full and steamy, which is the point of the packet method.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The shrimp will tighten a little after chilling, so it won’t be quite as plump as it is fresh from the packet.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing the finished packets. Shrimp and zucchini both lose texture after thawing, and the vegetables turn soft in a way that doesn’t recover well.
- Reheating: Rewarm gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until heated through. High heat will overcook the shrimp before the vegetables are warmed, which is the fastest way to ruin the leftovers.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Cajun Shrimp Foil Packets
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat your grill to medium-high heat (about 400°F), or preheat your oven to 425°F.
- In a small bowl, mix smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, dried oregano, dried thyme, cayenne pepper, black pepper, and salt, then set the Cajun seasoning blend aside.
- In a large bowl, combine large shrimp, Andouille sausage, corn ears, red bell pepper, green bell pepper, and zucchini; drizzle with olive oil and toss until coated.
- Sprinkle the full Cajun seasoning blend over the shrimp-and-vegetable mixture and toss again until evenly coated.
- Tear off four large sheets of heavy-duty aluminum foil (about 18 inches each) and divide the seasoned shrimp and vegetable mixture evenly among the four sheets, piling it in the center of each.
- Dot the top of each packet with small cubes of unsalted butter (about 1 tablespoon per packet).
- Fold the foil over the filling and crimp the edges tightly on all sides to seal each packet completely.
- Grill method: Place packets directly on grill grates and cook for 12–15 minutes, until shrimp are pink and opaque and vegetables are tender.
- Oven method: Place packets on a rimmed baking sheet and bake for 18–20 minutes at 425°F, until shrimp are pink and opaque and vegetables are tender.
- Remove packets carefully (they’ll be very hot and full of steam) and let them rest for 2 minutes before opening.
- Carefully cut open the foil (watch the steam) and garnish with fresh parsley; serve immediately with lemon wedges and crusty bread or rice alongside.