Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Seafood Boil Recipe

A bright, buttery, garlicky seafood boil with Old Bay style spice, lemon, and crisp corn and potatoes. Easy to scale for a crowd, and even easier to mop up with bread.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.9
A steaming seafood boil spread on parchment paper with shrimp, crab legs, corn on the cob, red potatoes, sausage rounds, lemon halves, and parsley on a wooden table

If you want a dinner that feels like a party without requiring party-level effort, a seafood boil is it. One big pot, a lot of steam, a lot of lemon, and that moment when everyone leans in like, yes, this is happening. The trick is not fancy seafood. It is layered timing and a butter sauce that tastes like you meant it.

This version is bold and cozy at the same time: tender potatoes, sweet corn, smoky sausage, shrimp that still has snap, and crab that basically demands you slow down and enjoy your life for a minute. We keep the ingredients accessible, the steps clear, and the flavor loud in the best way.

A large stockpot on a stove filled with boiling corn, potatoes, and crab legs with steam rising

Why It Works

  • Big flavor with low drama: The boil water is seasoned like a proper broth, then we finish with a quick garlic-lemon butter sauce for that glossy, can't-stop-eating vibe.
  • Perfect texture: Potatoes start first (but only partway), then corn, then sausage, then shellfish last so nothing turns rubbery or mushy.
  • Flexible seafood: Use shrimp, crab, mussels, crawfish, or lobster based on budget and what looks good at the store.
  • Crowd-friendly: Easy to double in a bigger pot, and cleanup is basically parchment paper and good intentions.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Best move: pull leftover seafood out of the shells first. It saves space and keeps it from getting overly fishy in the fridge.

  • Refrigerate: Store potatoes, corn, sausage, and picked seafood in separate airtight containers if you can. Keeps 1 to 2 days (2 days max, and seafood is best on day 1).
  • Reheat gently: Warm seafood in a skillet with a splash of water or broth and a little butter over low heat just until hot. Avoid microwaving too long or it gets chewy.
  • Steam to revive: For a quick warm-up that stays tender, reheat in a steamer basket over simmering water for a few minutes, then hit it with an extra spoonful of sauce.
  • Heat-safe bag option: If you love the bag method, use a heat-safe silicone bag rated for simmering. Add a spoonful of sauce, seal, and warm in barely simmering water until heated through.
  • Freezing: I do not recommend freezing cooked shrimp or crab from a boil if you can help it. Texture takes a hit. Potatoes also get mealy.

Leftover seafood boil components stored in clear airtight containers with lemon wedges

Common Questions

What seafood is best for a seafood boil?

Shrimp and snow crab legs are the easiest and most reliable. Add mussels for extra flavor and a little drama. If you want to go bigger, lobster tails are great, but cook them at the end like the shrimp.

Do I have to use beer?

Nope. You can replace the beer with seafood stock, chicken stock, or just more water. Beer adds a subtle malty sweetness, but lemon, garlic, and seasoning do the heavy lifting.

How spicy is this?

As written, it is medium. The boil water is seasoned, but the real heat comes from cayenne in the butter sauce. Start with less, then add more at the table.

Why did my shrimp turn rubbery?

It stayed in the hot pot too long. Shrimp cooks fast, usually 2 to 3 minutes. As soon as it turns pink and curls into a loose C shape, get it out and toss with sauce.

Can I make this without crab or for shellfish allergies?

Yes. Do a "boil" with smoked sausage, corn, potatoes, and peeled shrimp only, or skip seafood entirely and make it a sausage and veggie boil with the same lemon-garlic butter sauce.

Do I need a strainer basket?

Nice to have, not required. A spider strainer or tongs work fine. Worst case, you carefully pour into a colander in the sink.

How do I prep mussels and clams?

Mussels: Scrub, pull off the beard, and discard any cracked shells. If one is open and does not close when tapped, toss it.

Clams: Scrub and soak in cold salted water for 20 to 30 minutes to help purge sand. Discard any cracked shells, and toss any that are open and do not close when tapped.

The first time I made a seafood boil for friends, I treated it like a science project. Timers, notes, a suspicious amount of confidence. Then I overcooked the shrimp because I got distracted arguing about the best hot sauce. Classic. Now I do it the friend way: keep the boil simple, cook seafood last, and pour that garlicky butter sauce on everything like you are trying to make someone fall in love with dinner. Works every time.