Campfire Cones

Category: Desserts & Baking

Campfire cones hit that sweet spot between nostalgic and low-effort: warm, gooey, and just messy enough to feel like a treat. The waffle cone softens at the edges, the chocolate melts into the marshmallows, and the fruit turns the whole thing into something brighter than a basic s’more. It’s the kind of dessert people lean into the fire for, then ask for again before the first round is gone.

What makes these work is the layering. Marshmallows and chocolate need to be tucked through the middle so they melt into each other, while the banana and strawberries add moisture and a little fresh contrast instead of making the filling flat and one-note. Wrapping the cones fully in foil matters, too. That keeps the cone from scorching before the center gets hot enough to soften.

Below you’ll find the easiest way to keep the cones from leaking, how long they need over the fire, and a few swaps that make this dessert work for different crowds and camping setups.

The marshmallows melted into the chocolate just right, and the banana kept the filling creamy without making the cone soggy. My kids loved opening the foil packets themselves.

★★★★★— Megan T.

These campfire cones are the easiest way to get melty s’mores-style filling without skewers or sticky hands.

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Why the Cone Stays Crisp While the Filling Turns Gooey

The trick with campfire cones is heat control. If you put them directly in aggressive flames, the outside of the foil gets hot fast while the center barely warms, and that’s when the cone starts tasting burnt before the filling has a chance to melt. Medium heat on a grate gives you a slower, more even warm-up, which is what turns the chocolate glossy and the marshmallows soft without turning the cone into ash.

The foil is doing more than keeping things neat. It traps steam from the fruit and marshmallows, which helps the filling soften all the way through. The other thing worth knowing is rotation: a quarter turn every minute or so keeps one side from overcooking while the middle still lags behind.

What Each Layer Is Doing Inside the Cone

Campfire Cones melted marshmallows chocolate fruit
  • Waffle cones — These hold up better than standard sugar cones because they’re sturdier and less likely to crack when you pack them full. Fresh cones are best. Stale cones can split at the seam once they heat up.
  • Mini marshmallows — They melt into the gaps and help everything bind together. Regular marshmallows work if that’s what you have, but cut them smaller so the filling cooks evenly.
  • Chocolate chips — Chips give you little pockets of melted chocolate instead of a puddle. Semi-sweet is the safest pick here because it balances the sweetness from the cone and marshmallows.
  • Bananas and strawberries — These bring freshness and keep the filling from feeling heavy. Slice the banana just before assembling so it doesn’t brown, and dice the strawberries small enough that they heat through without making the cone wet.
  • Graham cracker pieces — This gives the dessert its s’mores finish and helps soak up some of the melted filling. Use coarsely broken pieces, not crumbs, so you still get a little crunch.
  • Aluminum foil — Don’t skimp here. A full wrap is what protects the cone and keeps the filling from leaking onto the grate.

Building the Fill and Managing the Fire

Layering the Cone Without Crushing It

Start by adding a little of everything in alternating layers so the marshmallows and chocolate aren’t all sitting at the bottom. Pack the filling in lightly; if you press it too hard, the cone can crack before it goes on the fire. Leave a small gap at the top so the melted filling has room to bubble without overflowing when it heats.

Wrapping for Even Melting

Wrap each cone completely in foil, sealing the edges so no filling can leak out. A loose wrap lets heat escape and can leave the center cold while the outside gets too hot. The packet should feel snug, not squashed.

Heating Until the Center Turns Glossy

Set the wrapped cones on a campfire grate over medium heat and rotate them every minute or so. You’re looking for the cone to feel warm through the foil and the filling to soften enough that it will spoon out easily, not liquefy into a runny mess. Pull them off once the chocolate is melted and the marshmallows look puffy, then let them rest for two minutes so the filling settles.

Unwrapping and Serving

Open the foil slowly because steam will escape fast, and the cone will be hot enough to burn your fingers. Spoon straight into the cone or eat it from the foil if the bottom starts to soften. The best texture happens right away, while the cone is warm but still holding its shape.

How to Change These Campfire Cones for Different Crowds

Dairy-Free and Vegan Version

Use dairy-free chocolate chips and choose marshmallows that fit your diet, since many standard marshmallows contain gelatin. The result is still gooey and sweet, but the chocolate flavor reads a little cleaner without the milk solids.

Gluten-Free Swap

Use gluten-free waffle cones or sturdy gluten-free cones and check that your graham cracker pieces are certified gluten-free. The texture stays close to the original, though some gluten-free cones soften a little faster, so keep the heating time on the short side.

Chocolate-Berry Version

Skip the banana and double the strawberries, or swap in blueberries for part of the fruit. You’ll get a brighter filling with less creaminess, which works well if you want the cones to taste a little lighter and less candy-like.

Make-Ahead Campfire Packets

Assemble and wrap the cones up to a few hours ahead, then keep them chilled in a cooler until you’re ready to cook. This helps the chocolate stay firm during transport, but don’t leave the fruit-packed cones sitting in the heat too long or the cones can start to soften before they ever hit the fire.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Best eaten right away, but assembled cones can be chilled for up to 4 hours before cooking. After heating, leftovers get soft fast and the cone loses its crunch.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing these. The fruit turns watery and the cone goes soggy once thawed.
  • Reheating: If you need to warm a cooled cone, wrap it again in foil and heat briefly over low coals. The mistake to avoid is blasting it over high heat, which burns the cone before the filling loosens again.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make campfire cones in the oven?+

Yes. Put the foil-wrapped cones on a baking sheet and heat them at 350°F for about 5 to 7 minutes. Keep an eye on them, because ovens warm the cone more evenly than a fire and they can go from melted to too soft fast.

How do I keep the cone from getting soggy?+

Use fruit sparingly and cut it small so it softens without flooding the cone. The foil helps trap heat, but the real fix is not overfilling the cone in the first place. If the filling is packed too tightly, the fruit releases more moisture and the cone gives out faster.

Can I use regular marshmallows instead of mini marshmallows?+

Yes, but cut them into smaller pieces first so they melt at the same pace as the chocolate chips. Whole marshmallows can stay intact in the middle while the outside gets overcooked, which leaves you with uneven filling.

How do I know when campfire cones are done?+

The foil should feel hot, the filling should be visibly soft, and the marshmallows should look puffed and glossy. You don’t want a full boil inside the cone; you want everything melted enough that a spoon slides through easily. If the cone starts smelling toasted before the center is soft, pull it off immediately.

Can I assemble campfire cones ahead of time?+

Yes, and it’s a smart move for camping. Assemble and foil-wrap them a few hours ahead, then keep them cool until you’re ready to cook. I wouldn’t fill them the night before, because the fruit starts breaking down and the cone can soften before it ever hits the fire.

Campfire Cones

Campfire dessert with waffle ice cream cones stuffed like s’mores alternative—marshmallows melt, chocolate chips soften, and fruit stays chunky. Quick camp-style melting over medium heat makes an ooey-gooey filling perfect for kids camping.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
cooling 2 minutes
Total Time 17 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 490

Ingredients
  

Waffle ice cream cones
  • 6 waffle ice cream cones
Mini marshmallows
  • 1 cup mini marshmallows
Chocolate chips
  • 1 cup chocolate chips
Banana slices
  • 1 cup banana slices
Strawberries, diced
  • 0.5 cup strawberries, diced
Graham cracker pieces
  • 0.5 cup graham cracker pieces
Aluminum foil
  • 1 aluminum foil

Method
 

Fill the cones
  1. Fill each waffle cone with layers of mini marshmallows, chocolate chips, banana slices, strawberries, and graham cracker pieces.
Melt over the campfire
  1. Wrap each filled cone completely in aluminum foil, sealing it so the filling stays contained.
  2. Place the wrapped cones on a campfire grate over medium heat for 4-5 minutes, rotating occasionally so the marshmallows melt evenly.
Cool and serve
  1. Remove the cones from the fire and let them cool for 2 minutes so the foil can be handled safely.
  2. Carefully unwrap the foil and enjoy the melted filling with a spoon.

Notes

Pro tip: build the layers evenly and keep the foil tightly wrapped to trap heat for faster melting. Store any leftovers in the fridge up to 1 day, then rewarm briefly in foil. Freezing isn’t recommended because the fruit texture changes. For a lighter option, use reduced-sugar marshmallows and dark chocolate chips for the same gooey cone experience.

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