Bacon Ranch Chicken Foil Packets come off the fire with everything people want from a no-fuss dinner: juicy chicken, smoky bacon, tender potatoes, and broccoli that keeps a little bite instead of turning to mush. The whole meal stays sealed up until the moment you open it, which means the bacon seasons the chicken, the ranch gets pulled into the vegetables, and the cheese melts right on top instead of disappearing into a pan.
The trick is giving the potatoes a head start by cutting them small enough to cook through in the same window as the chicken. Heavy-duty foil matters here, too, because thin foil tears when the packets are moved around on the grill or campfire grate. Once the packets are sealed, the steam does most of the work, so the main job is keeping the heat steady and not opening them early.
Below, I’ve included the small details that keep these packets from leaking or cooking unevenly, plus a few ways to adapt them for the oven, the grill, or a lighter dinner at home.
The potatoes were tender right on time and the bacon kept the chicken from drying out. I opened the packets and the cheese melted into everything without making a mess. This is going in our camping rotation.
Bacon Ranch Chicken Foil Packets with melty cheddar and tender potatoes are the kind of campfire dinner worth making twice.
Why the Potatoes Need to Be Smaller Than the Chicken
The biggest mistake with foil packets is assuming everything inside will cook at the same pace. Chicken breasts and baby potatoes are not on the same schedule, and if the potatoes are left too large, the chicken will hit temperature before the vegetables turn tender. Halving the potatoes keeps them in range without overcooking the meat.
The bacon also helps more than people expect. As it heats, it seasons the chicken and creates a little fat that coats the potatoes and broccoli. That fat is one reason the vegetables taste like they were cooked with more than just ranch seasoning. If the packet is sealed tightly, the steam stays trapped and the chicken stays juicy instead of drying out over direct heat.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Packet

- Boneless chicken breasts — These give you a clean, lean center for the packet. Try to use pieces that are similar in thickness so one breast doesn’t finish early while another is still catching up.
- Ranch seasoning mix — This is the shortcut that makes the whole packet taste seasoned all the way through. A homemade ranch blend can work, but the packet mix is usually saltier and more balanced for this kind of sealed cooking.
- Bacon — Two slices per breast is enough to baste the chicken without turning the packet greasy. Thicker-cut bacon is fine, but if it’s very thick, it may stay a little chewy unless you give the packets the full cooking time.
- Baby potatoes — These are the ingredient that needs the most respect. Cut them small and even, because large chunks stay firm long after the chicken is done.
- Broccoli florets — Broccoli keeps the packet from feeling heavy and picks up the bacon drippings nicely. Add florets that are medium-sized; tiny ones can over-soften if the packets run hot.
- Heavy-duty aluminum foil — This isn’t the place to use thin foil. The packets need to hold up on a grill grate or over campfire heat without splitting when you turn them or open them at the end.
Building the Packet So the Chicken Stays Juicy
Seasoning Before Sealing
Lay each chicken breast on its own sheet of foil and season it before anything else goes on top. That keeps the ranch close to the meat instead of drifting into the vegetables where it gets diluted. If your ranch mix seems uneven, sprinkle it from a little height so it lands more like a dusting than a clump. Clumps can stay powdery after cooking.
Wrapping and Layering
Wrap the bacon around the chicken before you add the vegetables. The bacon acts like a barrier, so the chicken stays moist while the potatoes and broccoli cook around it. Place the potatoes close to the chicken because they need the most heat; broccoli can sit around the edges where it won’t overcook as quickly. Keep everything in a single layer as much as possible so steam can move through the packet.
Sealing and Cooking Over Heat
Fold the foil tightly so the seams are locked and the packet looks puffed, not flat. That trapped space is what turns the ingredients into a small steam oven. Cook over medium heat for 20 to 25 minutes, and don’t guess on doneness if the chicken breasts are large; open one packet and check the center with a thermometer. Pulling them too early is the quickest way to end up with hard potatoes and underdone chicken.
Melting the Cheese at the End
Open the packets carefully because the steam will rush out. Sprinkle the cheddar over the hot chicken and vegetables, then close the foil back over the top for a minute or two. That short rest is enough to melt the cheese without drying out the chicken. If you leave the packets open too long, the cheese won’t melt evenly and the food will cool fast.
How to Adjust These Packets for Different Cooktops and Diets
Oven-Baked Foil Packets
Bake the sealed packets on a sheet pan at 400°F for about 25 to 30 minutes. You lose a little of the smoky campfire flavor, but the packets still steam beautifully and the cleanup stays just as easy.
Dairy-Free Version
Skip the cheddar or use a dairy-free shreds that melts well. The dish still works because the bacon and ranch carry most of the flavor, but the finish will be less creamy and a little less rich.
Vegetable Swap for the Broccoli
Cauliflower florets or green beans work well here. Cauliflower behaves a lot like broccoli, while green beans stay a little firmer and pick up more of the bacon drippings without softening as much.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The potatoes soften a bit as they sit, but the flavor holds up well.
- Freezer: The cooked chicken and potatoes can be frozen, but the broccoli turns soft after thawing, so I only freeze this when I know texture won’t matter much. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Reheating: Reheat covered in a 325°F oven until hot, or warm gently in the microwave in short bursts. High heat dries out the chicken and makes the potatoes tougher before the center is warm.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Bacon Ranch Chicken Foil Packets
Ingredients
Method
- Place each boneless chicken breasts on a sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil and sprinkle with ranch seasoning mix. Lay the chicken centered so it cooks evenly.
- Wrap each chicken breast with 2 slices of bacon. Press lightly so the bacon stays in place during cooking.
- Surround the chicken with baby potatoes, halved and broccoli florets. Keep the vegetables snug around the chicken for even steam-cooking.
- Fold the foil into sealed packets. Crimp the edges tightly so steam stays inside.
- Place the packets on a campfire grate over medium heat for 20-25 minutes until the chicken reaches 165°F. Look for steady steam rising from the packet seams.
- Open packets and sprinkle shredded cheddar cheese on top. Watch it melt into the hot chicken and vegetables.
- Reseal packets briefly to melt the cheese, then serve. Keep the packets closed just until the cheese is fully melted.


