Garlic Butter Steak and Potato Foil Packets

Category:Dinner Recipes

Garlic butter steak and potato foil packets deliver the kind of meal that comes off the grill smelling like you worked a lot harder than you did. The steak stays juicy, the potatoes turn tender at the edges, and every bite gets coated in melted butter, garlic, and herbs. When the packets are sealed right, the potatoes steam and sizzle at the same time, which is what gives them that soft-inside, lightly browned-outside finish.

The trick is balancing two foods that cook at different speeds. Baby potatoes need a head start, so cutting them into halves helps them catch up to the steak without turning the meat dry. Heavy-duty foil matters here because a weak packet can leak butter, lose steam, and leave you with undercooked potatoes and a dry pan to clean up. A quick flip halfway through keeps everything cooking evenly and helps the butter stay where it belongs.

Below you’ll find the little things that make these packets work the first time: how to size the potatoes, what to look for before you seal the foil, and a few smart swaps if you want to change the seasoning or cook them a different way.

The potatoes came out perfectly tender and the steak stayed juicy, even after flipping the packets on the grill. The garlic butter soaked into everything and the foil cleanup was basically nothing.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save these garlic butter steak and potato foil packets for the nights when you want smoky grilled steak, tender potatoes, and almost no cleanup.

Save to Pinterest

The Part That Stops the Potatoes from Ending Up Underdone

The most common mistake with foil packet dinners is treating the potatoes like they’ll catch up on their own. Steak cubes cook fast, but baby potatoes need enough time and enough contact with heat to soften all the way through. Halving them is the right move, but if one side is especially large, trim it again so the pieces are close in size. That little bit of attention is what keeps you from biting into tender steak next to firm potatoes.

The other thing that matters is how tightly the packets are sealed. Steam is doing part of the cooking here, and a loose crimp lets it escape before the potatoes are ready. The foil should be snug but not packed so full that the ingredients sit in a flat layer with no room for heat to move around. You want a shallow mound with enough surface area to brown a little once the packets are flipped.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Packets

Garlic Butter Steak and Potato Foil Packets tender steak golden potatoes
  • Sirloin steak — Sirloin gives you a good balance of tenderness and beefy flavor without the price tag of ribeye. Cut it into 1-inch cubes so it cooks evenly and stays juicy. Smaller pieces dry out faster, and bigger ones can leave you with potatoes that finish late.
  • Baby potatoes — These hold their shape better than larger potatoes and soften at a steady pace. Halving them creates more cut surface, which means more buttery edges and faster cooking. If some are much larger than the others, cut them into quarters so the packet finishes evenly.
  • Butter and garlic — This is the base that carries the seasoning into every bite. Melted butter coats the potatoes better than oil alone and helps the garlic and spices cling to the meat. Fresh garlic matters here because jarred garlic can taste muted once it cooks inside the packet.
  • Thyme and paprika — Thyme gives the packets that classic savory note, and paprika adds warmth and a little color. Smoked paprika works if you want a deeper grilled flavor, but regular paprika keeps the seasoning more straightforward. Neither one should overpower the butter and garlic.
  • Heavy-duty foil — Thin foil tears too easily once the packets are flipped or moved around the grill. Heavy-duty sheets hold the steam in and make cleanup easier. If you only have standard foil, double-layer each packet so the butter doesn’t leak out.

Building the Packets So the Steak Stays Juicy

Mix the garlic butter first

Stir the melted butter, garlic, parsley, thyme, paprika, salt, and pepper together before anything else goes in. That keeps the seasoning from clumping and makes it easier to coat the steak and potatoes evenly. If the butter starts to solidify while you’re working, warm it just enough to loosen it again. You want liquid, not hot enough to start cooking the garlic.

Coat everything before it hits the foil

Toss the steak cubes and potato halves in the garlic butter mixture until every surface looks glossy. The coating matters because it seasons the food and helps the packets steam properly. Dry spots in the packet cook unevenly and don’t pick up the same flavor. If the potatoes seem bare, give them an extra spoonful of butter mixture before sealing.

Seal for steam, then flip for even heat

Divide the mixture among four large foil sheets and fold each one into a tight packet with crimped edges. Leave a little room inside so steam can circulate; a packet stuffed too tightly can steam unevenly. Grill over medium-high heat for 20 to 25 minutes, flipping halfway through. If your grill runs hot, check one packet at the 18-minute mark so the steak doesn’t overcook while the potatoes catch up.

Open carefully and finish with herbs

Let the packets sit for a minute after they come off the grill, then open them away from your face. The steam is intense and the butter will be bubbling. The potatoes should be fork-tender and the steak should look browned at the edges, not gray. A final shower of fresh parsley brightens the whole thing and keeps the butter from tasting heavy.

How to Change These Foil Packets Without Breaking the Recipe

Dairy-Free Garlic Herb Packets

Swap the butter for olive oil or a plant-based butter that melts cleanly. You’ll lose a little of that rich, creamy finish, but the garlic and herbs still carry the dish well. If you use olive oil, add an extra pinch of salt because butter normally brings some saltiness with it.

Add Mushrooms or Bell Peppers

Sliced mushrooms or peppers work well folded in with the steak and potatoes. Mushrooms add extra juices and a deeper savory note, while peppers bring sweetness and color. Keep the pieces chunky so they don’t collapse before the potatoes are done.

Use Chicken Instead of Steak

Boneless chicken thighs can stand in for the steak and stay juicy on the grill. Cut them into similar-sized pieces and cook until the chicken reaches 165°F. Chicken breast works too, but it dries out faster, so check it early.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The potatoes soften a bit more after chilling, but the flavor stays good.
  • Freezer: These freeze okay, though the potatoes will be softer after thawing. Cool completely, pack tightly, and freeze for up to 2 months.
  • Reheating: Warm in a covered skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of water or extra butter. The key is gentle heat; high heat dries out the steak before the potatoes are heated through.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use a different cut of steak? +

Yes. New York strip and ribeye both work well, and they’ll taste a little richer than sirloin. Cut them into even cubes and keep the cook time the same, but check early if your grill runs hot because those cuts can go from perfect to overdone fast.

How do I know when the potatoes are done? +

They should slide easily off a fork when you pierce the center of the largest piece. If the steak is done but the potatoes still feel firm, close the packet back up and give it a few more minutes over medium heat. The sealed packet keeps the meat from drying out while the potatoes finish.

Can I bake these in the oven instead of grilling? +

Yes, bake them on a sheet pan at 425°F. The timing is usually close to the grill version, about 25 minutes, but oven heat is gentler, so the potatoes may need a few extra minutes. Open one packet carefully and check the largest potato before serving.

Can I prep the packets ahead of time? +

You can assemble them a few hours ahead and keep them chilled until grilling time. Don’t let them sit overnight, because the potatoes can start to discolor and the steak texture suffers a bit. If you prep ahead, keep the foil packets sealed and wait to grill until the last minute.

How do I keep the foil from tearing on the grill? +

Use heavy-duty foil and avoid overfilling each packet. A single snug layer is fine if the foil is sturdy, but if it feels flimsy, double it before sealing. The tear usually happens when a packet is too heavy or gets flipped with tongs that pinch one soft corner.

Garlic Butter Steak and Potato Foil Packets

Garlic butter steak and potato foil packets with tender steak bites and golden potatoes—coated in a garlicky butter mix and grilled in sealed aluminum packets. Open to release steam and serve right from the foil for an easy grilled packets dinner.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 680

Ingredients
  

sirloin steak
  • 1.5 lb sirloin steak cut into 1-inch cubes
baby potatoes
  • 1.5 lb baby potatoes halved
butter
  • 0.5 cup butter melted
garlic
  • 6 clove garlic minced
fresh parsley
  • 2 tbsp fresh parsley chopped
  • Fresh parsley for garnish optional garnish
dried thyme
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
paprika
  • 1 tsp paprika
salt
  • Salt to taste
pepper
  • pepper to taste

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Make the garlic butter
  1. In a bowl, combine melted butter, minced garlic, chopped parsley, dried thyme, paprika, salt, and pepper until evenly mixed. The mixture should look glossy and speckled from the herbs.
Coat the steak and potatoes
  1. Add the steak cubes and halved baby potatoes to the garlic butter mixture and toss until everything is well coated. You should see a thin, buttery sheen clinging to both the steak and potatoes.
Pack and grill
  1. Divide the steak and potato mixture evenly among 4 large pieces of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Form four mounds so each packet stays filled with similar amounts.
  2. Fold the foil into sealed packets and tightly crimp all edges so no steam escapes. The packets should feel firmly closed with smooth, doubled seams.
  3. Grill the packets over medium-high heat for 20-25 minutes, flipping halfway through. Cook until the potatoes are tender and the steak is cooked through, with steam puffing the foil.
Serve
  1. Carefully open the packets, watching for steam as the foil peels back. The contents should look hot, glossy, and saucy from the garlic butter.
  2. Garnish with fresh parsley and serve immediately. Finish with a bright green sprinkle for a fresh look.

Notes

Prepping tip: cut the steak into 1-inch cubes and halve potatoes to help them cook in the same window on the grill. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container up to 3 days; reheat gently until steaming. Freezing is not recommended because potatoes can become soft after thawing. For a lower-fat option, use half butter and half olive oil (or a light butter spread) while keeping the garlic and seasonings the same.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating