Golden, buttery campfire potatoes hit that sweet spot between smoky, tender, and crisp at the edges. The sliced potatoes soften in their own steam, the onions turn sweet, and the butter carries the seasoning into every layer, so you get a side dish that tastes like it took much more effort than it did.
What makes this version work is the way the potatoes are sliced thin and layered with onions before the packet is sealed. That gives the campfire heat enough surface area to work fast without leaving the centers underdone. The foil packet also matters: it traps steam first, then lets the edges pick up a little roasted flavor as the potatoes finish.
Below, I’ll show you the small details that keep the packet from tearing, the potatoes from drying out, and the cheese from turning greasy instead of melty. If you’ve ever opened a foil packet to find crunchy potatoes in one corner and mush in another, this version fixes that.
The potatoes came out tender all the way through, and the onion got sweet without burning. I flipped the packet once like you said and the butter kept everything moist right to the end.
Save these campfire potatoes for the next cookout when you want a smoky foil packet side with buttery layers and crisp edges.
The Part That Keeps Foil Packet Potatoes From Turning Watery
Foil packet potatoes fail when the slices are too thick or packed too tightly. Thick pieces need more time than the onions, so by the time the potatoes soften, the onion can turn limp and the butter can pool instead of coating everything. Thin slices fix that balance. They cook at the same pace, and the packet stays compact enough to heat evenly over a campfire grate.
The second thing that matters is the seal. If steam leaks out, the potatoes dry before the centers are tender. A double layer of heavy-duty foil gives you enough strength to fold the packet tightly and still flip it halfway through cooking without tearing it open.
- Thinly sliced potatoes cook through in the campfire’s steady heat and soak up the butter and seasoning instead of staying chalky in the middle.
- Onion brings sweetness and moisture. A sweet onion works nicely, but any standard yellow onion will do the job.
- Heavy-duty foil matters more than standard foil here. If all you have is the thinner kind, double it up and keep the packet snug so the bottom doesn’t split when you turn it.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Packet

- Potatoes are the backbone of the dish, so choose a waxy or all-purpose variety that holds its shape. Russets work, but they’ll break down a little more and give you a softer result.
- Butter carries the garlic powder and paprika across the slices. Cubing it helps it melt in pockets instead of running to one side of the packet.
- Garlic powder and paprika season the potatoes evenly. Fresh garlic can burn in a campfire packet, which is why the powder version is the safer choice.
- Cheddar cheese is optional, but it gives the packet a finished, melty top at the end. Add it only after the potatoes are fully tender so it melts instead of separating.
Building the Packet So the Potatoes Cook Evenly
Layering for even heat
Start with a double layer of foil and spread the potato slices in an even layer, then tuck the onion in among them instead of leaving it all on top. That keeps the onion from scorching while the potatoes finish. Season each layer as you build it, because once the packet is sealed, there’s no way for salt and spices to move around on their own.
Sealing in steam without crowding
Dot the top with butter cubes, then fold the foil into a tight packet with a little room for steam to circulate. If the packet is packed too tightly, the center takes longer to cook and the outer slices can turn soft before the middle is ready. A good packet feels snug, not squashed flat.
Cooking over the right heat
Place the packet on a campfire grate over medium heat and flip it once halfway through. You want a steady sizzle, not aggressive charring. If the heat is too high, the outside of the foil can scorch while the potatoes inside stay firm and pale.
The finish that makes it worth opening
Open the packet carefully because the steam comes out fast. If you’re using cheese, sprinkle it over the hot potatoes and reseal the packet for a couple of minutes so it melts from the trapped heat. Serve it right away while the edges are still hot and the butter is pooled at the bottom.
How to Change the Packet Without Losing the Good Texture
Dairy-Free Campfire Potatoes
Swap the butter for a plant-based butter that melts cleanly, or use olive oil for a lighter, less rich packet. You’ll lose a little of the classic buttery finish, but the potatoes still get tender and the spices cling well.
Campfire Potatoes With Bacon
Add cooked, crumbled bacon when you layer the potatoes or sprinkle it in at the end. Raw bacon doesn’t have enough time to render properly in the same window, so pre-cooked bacon gives you the smoky, salty bite without making the packet greasy.
Extra-Cheesy Foil Packet Potatoes
Add the cheddar only after the potatoes are tender, then reseal the packet for two minutes. If cheese goes in too early, it can grease out and coat the potatoes instead of melting into a clean, stretchy layer.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The potatoes soften a little as they sit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing these. The potato slices lose their texture and turn grainy after thawing.
- Reheating: Warm them in a skillet over medium-low heat or in a 375°F oven until hot. The microwave works in a pinch, but it makes the potatoes steam instead of re-crisping the edges.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Campfire Potatoes
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Layer the thinly sliced potatoes and sliced onion on a large double-layer of heavy-duty aluminum foil, spreading into an even mound with no big gaps.
- Dot the potato-onion layer with butter cubes so the fat distributes across the packet.
- Season evenly with garlic powder, paprika, salt, and pepper, aiming for full coverage of the exposed surfaces.
- Fold the foil into a sealed packet, pressing along the edges so steam stays inside.
- Place the sealed packet on a campfire grate over medium heat for 25-30 minutes, cooking undisturbed so the potatoes soften through.
- Flip the packet halfway through the cook time so the slices brown more evenly on both sides.
- Open the packet (carefully for steam) and sprinkle with shredded cheddar cheese if desired.
- Reseal and cook the opened-yet-sealed packet for 2 minutes, just until the cheese melts and looks glossy.
- Serve hot directly from the packet.


