Cajun Seafood Boil with Garlic Butter Sauce
This is the BEST Seafood Boil recipe you can whip up right at home, y’all. It’s loaded with jumbo shrimp, crab, andouille sausage, potatoes, eggs, and corn on the cob that’s simmered in a flavor-filled broth of cajun spices and aromatics. All that hearty goodness gets drowned and smothered in an epic garlic butter sauce. This finger-licking-good seafood boil recipe is an easy meal that serves a crowd!

Mmmhmmm, seafood boils just cannot be beat, especially during these summer months. The delicious mess of seafood, sausage, potatoes, and corn all drenched in sauce and dripping from your fingertips…whew. The entire experience is so much fun and so dang good huh. Buckle up and let’s get into this recipe!
Cajun Seafood Boil w/ Garlic Butter Sauce 😋
This easy to make boil is brimming with all the meaty, hearty bites like andouille, shrimp, and crab. And then there’s filling elements like potatoes, corn, and hard-boiled eggs to amp up the fullness of it all. In my honest opinion, a seafood boil is questionable if it doesn’t include big flavor and spices- just keeping it real. You’ll love the heaps of flavor from Cajun seasoning and Old Bay spices all throughout: in the boil itself and in the luscious garlic butter sauce, swoon.

Seafood Boil Recipe Highlights
⇢ First, let’s discuss some main highlights that you’ll appreciate here:
- SOOO EASY, YAY: One of my favorite things about a seafood boil is how effortless they are when it comes to cooking. Plus, there’s also very little hands-on work you’ll have to do here: it’s what I call a low-effort, high reward recipe! Therefore, it makes this Cajun seafood boil clutch for busy weeknights, entertaining, and everything in between. Yes, indeed.
- LIP-SMACKING FLAVA: Over on this corner of the internet, there’s no skimping on flavor. The seafood boil ingredients cook up in a well-seasoned and extra flavorful boil broth. Next, that same boil is smothered in a flavor-filled garlic butter sauce that’ll make you wanna do a little jiggy-jig, ayyeee.
- PERFECT FOR GATHERINGS: The summer is all about having cookouts, hanging with your family + friends, and connection galore. Well, a good ole seafood boil screams community and social gatherings, y’all. This recipe is the quintessential, communal meal to devour with a cozy group! 🫶🏾


What’s The Key To A Good Boil?
Excellent question, let’s talk about. The key to a really phenomenal seafood boil is to make the liquid as flavorful as possible, friends. Without that deep penetrating flavor the ingredients will be bland and sad, oof. Beer is one of the elements that adds a little razzle dazzle to enhance the boil broth. In addition to the beer, plenty of spices and aromatics make the liquid sing in flavorful notes. However, if beer is not your thing, you can surely proceed without it, too.
⇢ I recommend using lagers, IPAs, or pilsners for choices of beer! 👍🏾




Types Of Seafood For Seafood Boil
The types of seafood called for in this recipe will guide you on a really good seafood boil session, but you can also deviate and customize it to your liking! My Cajun seafood boil calls for snow crab clusters and shrimp- more options such as mussels, clams, other crab varieties (king crab legs, Dungeness crab, etc.), crawfish, and lobster tails all work well in seafood boils. Just use about 2 – 2 ½ pounds of your favorite seafood in the boil (make sure the crab you select is pre-cooked!). You can use frozen seafood just fine in this recipe, too.
⇢ It’s important to note that not all seafood cooks at the same rate, let’s look into some cooking time frames for specific seafood:
- Pre-cooked crab: 5-7 minutes (maybe 1-2 minutes longer for bigger pieces).
- Crawfish: about 4-5 minutes for small ones.
- Mussels & clams: about 5 minutes or until the shells open up.
- Lobster tails: about 5-6 minutes for a 5-6 ounce tail (or look for the lobster shell to turn bright red with opaque flesh).

FAQs & Tips + Tricks For Recipe Success
Here’s some extra tidbits & more information about this seafood boil recipe:
- Use an extra large pot: Seafood boils require cooking in a very large pot because once the liquid and food is added, the pot will be very full. I use my largest dutch oven (it’s about 10 quarts). Any super big stock pot or dutch oven is recommended for all the ingredients to fit nicely.
- Beer replacement: Great alternatives to using beer include chicken broth/stock or any nonalcoholic beer as an easy substitute.
- Cajun seasoning: My Creole Cajun seasoning is everything. This well-rounded spice is perfect here because it has a variety of spices all in one. Make my homemade version or use store-bought Cajun seasoning.
- Old Bay seasoning: Seafood and Old Bay are like besties, it just is what it is. This well-known seafood staple is another seasoning blend that contains celery salt, pepper, and paprika to name a few.
- Andouille: This is pre-cooked sausage and comes packed with a touch of heat (it’s smoked, nicely seasoned, and a staple among Cajun cuisine), but you can also use any other smoked sausage that you favor. Kielbasa or beef sausage make great substitutes for andouille.
- Potatoes: Use any small/baby potato variety. Red potatoes are common for seafood boils, but I love baby Yukon gold potatoes for their buttery flesh- either one or a combination of both is nice as well!
- Shrimp: I recommend using colossal shrimp or jumbo shrimp for this Cajun seafood boil. In fact, I typically grab super jumbo tiger shrimp that’s deveined with the peel still on. Peel-and-eat, big shrimp works beautifully here as it delivers meaty, plump bites of shrimp that’s more flavorful.

How To Serve Your Cajun Seafood Boil
Seafood boils are traditionally served by emptying the ingredients onto a newspaper-lined table. Pour the buttery sauce over the goods and then everyone just goes after whatever they desire. It’s quite chaotic and fun in the very best way! Additionally, it makes the clean-up much easier. However, I like to serve it on an extra large baking sheet or platter. Everything is more contained and the garlic butter sauce doesn’t soak into the newspaper.

Summer is here and this Cajun Seafood Boil needs to be enjoyed by you and all of your peeps, everyone’s gonna love! Be sure to tag @butterbeready in your BBR recipe creations, I sure love to see it when you do. Until next time! 🤟🏾
More Southern-inspired eats you can’t miss:
- Strawberry Biscuits (Popeyes-Inspired)
- Louisiana Red Beans and Rice
- Fried Green Tomatoes
- Gullah Red Rice
- BEST Crab Cakes
- Southern Peach Sweet Tea
Cajun Seafood Boil with Garlic Butter Sauce
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Total Time: 55 minutes
- Yield: 6
- Category: Main Dishes
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: Southern
Description
This is the BEST Seafood Boil recipe you can whip up right at home, y’all. It’s loaded with jumbo shrimp, crab, andouille sausage, potatoes, eggs, and corn on the cob that’s simmered in a flavor-filled broth of Cajun spices and aromatics. All that hearty goodness gets drowned and smothered in an epic garlic butter sauce. This finger-licking-good seafood boil recipe is an easy meal that serves a crowd!
Ingredients
For the cajun seafood boil:
- 3 quarts water
- 1 (12-ounce) can of beer- optional but highly recommended
- 3 tablespoons Creole Cajun Seasoning– homemade or store-bought
- 1 tablespoon Old Bay seasoning
- Hot sauce, to taste
- 1 medium yellow onion, roughly sliced into half-moons
- 1 large lemon, cut into wedges- plus more for serving
- 12 ounces andouille sausage, sliced into rounds
- 1 lb baby potatoes, red or gold (or a mix of both)
- 1 lb pre-cooked snow crab leg clusters, fresh or frozen
- 1 – 1 ½ lbs jumbo shrimp, deveined, shell-on or peeled
- 4–6 ears sweet corn on the cob, I use the mini ones
- 4–6 hard boiled eggs- optional
For the garlic butter sauce:
- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
- 10 cloves of garlic, finely minced or pressed
- 2 tablespoons lemon juice, freshly squeezed
- 1 tablespoon Old Bay seasoning
- 1 tablespoon fresh chopped parsley
- 1 teaspoon Creole Cajun Seasoning– homemade or store-bought
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- Hot sauce, to taste
Instructions
- Prepare the boil. In an extra large stockpot or dutch oven (about 10 quarts or larger) over medium-high heat, combine the water and beer (if using). Bring the liquid to a boil. Then season the boil with the Creole Cajun seasoning, Old Bay seasoning, and a few dashes of hot sauce- to taste. Add the sliced onion and lemon wedges into the pot. Stir all the ingredients well to thoroughly combine. Let the mixture boil for 15 minutes.
- Add the andouille & potatoes. Carefully add the andouille sausage rounds and baby potatoes into the pot, stirring well to fully combine with the boil. Let the andouille and potatoes cook for 15-20 minutes- or until the potatoes are just about fork-tender.
- Add the seafood & corn. Gently nestle the snow crab clusters into the pot along with the shrimp and corn on the cob. Be sure that everything is fully submerged under the boil and carefully stir to ensure all ingredients are well combined. Continue boiling for another 5-7 minutes, cooking until the shrimp is pink. Meanwhile, prepare the garlic butter sauce.
- Make the garlic butter sauce. On a separate burner, in a small saucepan over medium heat, combine the butter, garlic, lemon juice, Old Bay seasoning, parsley, Creole Cajun seasoning, smoked paprika, and hot sauce- to taste. Stir all ingredients and simmer the sauce until the butter melts and the sauce is well combined, stirring often, about 5-7 minutes. Then remove from heat.
- Assemble cajun seafood boil with sauce. Line an extra large baking sheet with foil/parchment paper (or newspaper if you’d like!). Use a spider strainer to remove the seafood boil contents from the pot and place onto the prepared baking sheet along with the hard boiled eggs (if using)- remove and discard the onion/lemon bits. Note: If you’d like your garlic butter sauce to be thinner, you can add some of the seafood boil broth to adjust to desired consistency. Now, this is the fun part! Pour the garlic butter sauce over the seafood boil ingredients. Then use your hands (fitted with disposable gloves if desired) to toss the sauce with everything, smothering every nook and cranny in sauce.
- Serve seafood boil. Feel free to serve this Cajun seafood boil as-is with everyone just grabbing what they’d like from the baking sheet directly (it’s the chaos and messiness of seafood boils that are so fun!) or divide the boil onto individual plates to serve if you prefer. Serve immediately with lemon wedges, if desired. Be sure to sop up any runaway garlic butter sauce. Enjoy!
Notes
- Please read blog post in its entirety for more tips + tricks.



428 Comments on “Cajun Seafood Boil with Garlic Butter Sauce”
Hi can you use chicken broth instead of water?
Hi there- Sure thing! 🙂
OMG This recipe is amazing! You made my goddaughter so happy for her 12th birthday. As a typical preteen she turns her nose up at most things. However, after having a blast with her friends at her own seafood-boil birthday party, she can’t stop talking about when we can do this again. The girls all loved the flavors and picking at the pile of food on the table. I wish that there was a way to share a picture of the event with you and your readers. Thank you so much!
Hi Mary- Oh how nice, love this feedback! I’m so glad they enjoyed this boil recipe! Thanks for taking the time to leave this review 🙂
Fabulous recipe – made my daughter’s seafood boil dreams come true. Thank you!
This recipe is always a major hit for my family. We did this today for our Christmas Dinner instead of a traditional ham and cheese all the usual sides. The added buttery sauce is amazingly delicious and the family sops it up until the last bite.
The best seafood boil I have ever had!!! I made it for Christmas dinner as a special treat for my family of 6. It was easy to make, everyone enjoyed it and clean up was a breeze!!! Thank you for sharing. ❤️
I’ve made this boil a few times and it’s always a hit! I use king crab legs and I leave the eggs out. Thanks!
Oh My Word!!! I have made a seafood boil for Christmas Day for 3 years now. I tried your recipe this year and I will never use anything else. My family could not get enough. Thank you for making Christmas Dinner a big hit.
Do I need to thaw out my seafood if I am using frozen?
Hi Jules- You can add frozen seafood into the boil, however, it may lengthen the cooking time. Just be mindful of that! 🙂
Super yummy! I made this for my family of 6 with about 3 times the amount of crab and it was a feast. super popular and not as difficult to make as I thought! Very flavorful, if you are going to make more meat, make more garlic butter sauce. Such a delicious addition.
Excellent balance of seasonings. It is a greasy, spicy mess and we love it. I’ve made this recipe several times now with everything per recipe but modified seafood (less shrimp, more crab legs, added clams) and it is excellent. Thank you so much for putting this together and sharing with us.
OMG this is the BEST seafood boil EVER! We have decided to make this our New Year’s Eve tradition. Thank you for such an amazing, easy, delicious recipe. Brings the whole family together.
I just cooked this literally a few minutes ago ago and it was delicious! Thank you for sharing this gift!
this recipe is a must in our home once a week for two years and many more to come. i like to add lobster tails, lobster claws, king crab.
Made this just as your recipe wrote.
Made a batch of the seasoning and it is great.
Added a zucchini just for a green.
Hubby and I loved it.
Makes up for the Joe’s Crab Shack closing in Utah.
Frankly, it was better than Joe’s.
I’m going to search your other recipes now.
Thanks again.
Hey Nan- So glad you enjoyed, thanks for this review! 🙂
We don’t have a seafood.place in my area, we wanted to do a boil and this recipe….. well better then any restaurant absolutely amazing definitely will use again!!!
Incredible recipe! I’ve made it several times and it is always a hit. Thank you!
My family and I love this recipe and I’m coming back to it again. I did have a question. What brand or type of beer do you recommend and at what point is it added? I’m sorry if I missed it.
Hey Jessica- I recommend using an IPA or pilsner here! 🙂
I’d like to know what kind of hot sauce you used?
I know there are tons of different option for hot sauce and would like to stay as close as possible to yours!
Also, does the flavor change that much more if we don’t use beer? I know you mentioned some substitutions (broth) would you substitute it or just not add any of the above if we decided not add beer?
Hi there- I love Louisiana hot sauce or Crystal with my seafood boil. If you don’t want to use beer, no worries, it adds some depth in terms of flavor but it’s not mandatory. I do recommend broth in place of it just to give your boil more flavor! Hope this helps! 🙂
Omgosh, sista girl! Nothing left to do now but to make some cheddar bicuits! I was never really interested in MAKING this, only eating it…lol. My Mississipi cuzzes made this and now I want to try. Love the beer and Old Bay additions. Always thought that was a DC thing! Thanks for the recipe.
Hey there- Some cheddar biscuits with this boil sound extra delicious! 🙂
Loved it…using this recipe and ONLY this recipe every time! Set my little Super Bowl party off!
So good!!!! Made it for a birthday celebration last night. Didn’t have crab, just the shrimp and chicken andouille sausage. Not a piece of shrimp or sausage was left and received praise all around. I will definitely make this again.
Super Bowl feast!
Two huge trays of buttery garlic seafood yumminess. Amazing 🤩. We tripled the recipe, paused the game, and ate. For about 40 min it overshadowed the Super Bowl.
I put in 2lb of Rock Cod. Cut into 2” chunks about 50 % of it survived intact and was great. The rest mixed in with the butter garlic sauce and was sopped up with a homemade biscuit. still a win. I know I overcooked it. What if I put the fish in cheese cloth or a colander and submerged it to keep track of it?
Hey there- Wowww love to hear this feedback, so glad the recipe was a hit for ya! Love how you added some rock cod into the mix as well, and I’d def recommend putting the fish in cheesecloth or some sort of sachet to keep track of it! 🙂
Omg!! The BESSSSSTTTT RECIPE! First time trying with beer and omg yessss!!! Love love love!!!
3 years ago, I decided to start having a seafood boil for my friends to celebrate Mardi Gras all the way in Kentucky. I have used this recipe every time and it is always a hit! There aren’t ever any leftovers. Super easy and delish.
This recipe is fairly easy to make, fairly nutritious and my teenager eats it. I love it so much and thank you very much for it. It is scrumptiously delicious. Everything from the corn to the potatoes and the different seafood flavours all covered in that delicious butter sauce is incredibly delicious.
I made this tonight. Have tried several boils. Made this exactly like the recipe, including the boiled eggs. Definitely a five-star recipe! Thank you!!!!