Camping with kids gets repetitive when every meal depends on hot dogs and s’mores. These 21 recipes bring breakfast, handheld dinners, foil packets, grilled mains, smoky sides, and fruit-filled desserts into the outdoor menu. Each choice uses a grill, griddle, smoker, skillet, foil packet, or simple camp-kitchen setup. The result is a full day of meals with enough variety to keep everyone interested from the first pancake to the last spoonful of berry crisp.

Bacon Pancakes

With strips of bacon cooked directly beneath the batter, Bacon Pancakes turn one griddle into a complete 40-minute breakfast for six. Buttermilk, brown sugar, cinnamon, eggs, and melted butter make the pancakes soft, while maple syrup handles the sweet finish. The bacon running through each pancake gives kids a handheld breakfast that is easier to manage than separate plates of meat and pancakes. Serve them warm before the day’s hiking, swimming, or campsite games begin.
Get the Recipe: Bacon Pancakes
Grilled Fruit Skewers with Cherry Dip

Fresh fruit gets a quick smoky edge in Grilled Fruit Skewers with Cherry Dip, a 20-minute dessert that makes four servings. Pineapple, strawberries, peaches, or bananas thread onto skewers, while marshmallow fluff, cream cheese, Greek yogurt, and maraschino cherry juice become the dip. Kids can choose their own fruit combinations and dip each piece at the table. Set these out after dinner when everyone wants something sweet without making another round of s’mores.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Fruit Skewers with Cherry Dip
Chicken Al Pastor Quesadillas

Ready in seven minutes, Chicken Al Pastor Quesadillas use two tortillas, shredded cheddar, diced chicken, green onion, and cilantro for one generous serving. The cheese goes above and below the chicken, helping the filling stay together as the tortilla crisps in a skillet. Cut the quesadilla into wedges for easier handling around a picnic table or camp chair. Salsa, guacamole, or sour cream can be served on the side for dipping.
Get the Recipe: Chicken Al Pastor Quesadillas
Grilled Elote Corn Ribs

Cut into curved pieces that are easy to hold, Grilled Elote Corn Ribs take 20 minutes and serve four. Corn cobs are grilled, then coated with a sauce of sour cream, mayonnaise, garlic, cumin, chipotle, and lime before cotija cheese and cilantro go on top. The rib shape turns a familiar vegetable into camp food kids can pick up with their hands. Serve them beside burgers, ribs, or grilled skewers while the corn is still hot.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Elote Corn Ribs
Denver Breakfast Potatoes

Crisp potatoes, diced ham, onions, and two colors of bell pepper fill Denver Breakfast Potatoes, a 35-minute skillet breakfast for four. Paprika, thyme, garlic, and parsley add seasoning without turning the dish into a complicated camp project. Everything cooks in one wide skillet, which keeps the morning setup manageable and gives the potatoes room to brown. Add fried eggs or toast for a full breakfast before packing up for the day’s activities.
Get the Recipe: Denver Breakfast Potatoes
Blackstone Smash Burger

Using one pound of 80/20 ground beef, Blackstone Smash Burger makes four servings in 15 minutes on a hot outdoor griddle. Salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder season the thin patties before they are stacked on buns with lettuce, tomato, onion, or ketchup. The quick cook time works well when kids are already hungry and waiting near the campsite. Set out the toppings so each person can build a burger without slowing down the griddle cook.
Get the Recipe: Blackstone Smash Burger
Grilled Fruit Quesadillas

Warm pie filling tucked inside crisp tortillas makes Grilled Fruit Quesadillas a 20-minute dessert for four. Small tortillas are brushed with butter, filled, grilled on a griddle plate, and dusted with cinnamon sugar. Apple, blueberry, or another pie filling lets the same method change with what the family likes. Serve the folded quesadillas warm after an outdoor dinner, or make them as a sweet campsite breakfast when fruit and cinnamon sound better than another marshmallow.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Fruit Quesadillas
Bacon-Wrapped Burgers

Wrapped with two slices of bacon per patty, Bacon-Wrapped Burgers cook in 20 minutes and make four burgers. Prepared patties go onto the grill with wood smoke, then land on bakery-style buns with lettuce, tomato, red onion, cheese, and condiments. Starting with frozen or thawed patties keeps campsite prep straightforward. These work for a family dinner when everyone wants a substantial burger, but the cook does not want to shape and season meat outdoors.
Get the Recipe: Bacon-Wrapped Burgers
Grilled Steak & Veggie Skewers

After a two-hour marinade, Grilled Steak & Veggie Skewers pair sirloin with zucchini ribbons and cherry tomatoes for six servings. Garlic, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, Dijon mustard, sugar, and smoked paprika build the marinade before the skewers cook quickly over medium-high heat. The alternating pieces make portioning simple and give kids a mix of meat and vegetables on one stick. Prepare the steak ahead, then grill the skewers when the campsite is ready for dinner.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Steak & Veggie Skewers
Smoked Pork & Pineapple Skewers

Sweet pineapple and savory pork share each stick in Smoked Pork & Pineapple Skewers, which serve four in about one hour and 40 minutes, including marinating. Pork loin, bell pepper, red onion, and pineapple are coated with brown sugar, cider vinegar, fish sauce, and garlic before smoking. The mix of fruit, meat, and vegetables makes every skewer a complete plate in miniature. Assemble them ahead so the campsite cook only needs to manage the smoker.
Get the Recipe: Smoked Pork & Pineapple Skewers
Grilled Teriyaki Mango Skewers

Colorful enough to stand out on any picnic table, Grilled Teriyaki Mango Skewers take 40 minutes and serve four. Honey mangos, red onion, zucchini, and bell peppers are brushed with a homemade sauce made from soy sauce, maple syrup, rice wine vinegar, and cornstarch. The fruit caramelizes while the vegetables soften on the grill. Serve the skewers over rice or quinoa when the camp menu needs a meatless main with plenty of substance.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Teriyaki Mango Skewers
Lemon-Dill Salmon Foil Packets

Sealed in individual packets, Lemon-Dill Salmon Foil Packets cook in 24 minutes and provide four servings with almost no dish cleanup. Each salmon fillet gets olive oil, lemon slices, fresh dill, garlic, and butter before the foil is folded closed. The packets can cook on a grill, over hot coals, or on a campfire grate with one turn halfway through. Open them carefully at the table and spoon the cooking juices over the fish.
Get the Recipe: Lemon-Dill Salmon Foil Packets
Grilled Strawberry Shortcake Skewers

Alternating berries and biscuit pieces make Grilled Strawberry Shortcake Skewers a 20-minute dessert for four. Whole strawberries and quartered biscuits spend only a few minutes on the grill before semisweet chocolate melted with coconut oil is drizzled over the top. The skewers can be assembled before dinner and grilled when the fire is already hot. Serve them as a bright final course that gives kids cake, fruit, and chocolate without building another s’more.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Strawberry Shortcake Skewers
Italian Herbed Chicken and Veggie Bake Foil Packs

Built as two individual dinners, Italian Herbed Chicken and Veggie Bake Foil Packs combine chicken breast, zucchini, red bell pepper, and red onion in 25 minutes. Olive oil, garlic powder, Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper coat everything before the foil packets are sealed. The enclosed steam keeps the ingredients moist and limits cleanup at camp. Assemble the packets at home, keep them chilled, and cook them when the fire or grill is ready.
Get the Recipe: Italian Herbed Chicken and Veggie Bake Foil Packs
Grilled Sausage & Peppers

Coiled Barese sausage gives Grilled Sausage & Peppers a different shape from standard campfire links, and the recipe serves two in 20 minutes. Red onion, green and red peppers, Italian seasoning, bakery-style buns, and whole-grain mustard complete the meal. The sausage and vegetables share the same grill or griddle plate, while the buns toast at the end. Double the quantities for a family and let kids pile the softened peppers onto their own sandwiches.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Sausage & Peppers
Bacon Fried Corn

Cooked in the bacon drippings, Bacon Fried Corn turns a few campsite staples into a 15-minute side for four. One pound of chopped bacon combines with four cups of corn, garlic, green onions, paprika, and parsley on an outdoor griddle. Fresh or frozen corn works, which helps when cooler space is limited. Spoon it beside burgers or grilled meat, or serve smaller bowls while everyone waits for the main dish to finish cooking.
Get the Recipe: Bacon Fried Corn
Grilled Ribs on a Charcoal Grill

A brown sugar and smoked paprika rub gives Grilled Ribs on a Charcoal Grill caramelized edges during a one-hour-and-40-minute cook for four. Baby back ribs start over indirect heat, then move to direct heat for color, with optional BBQ sauce added near the end. This is the longer camp dinner for a slow afternoon when no one is rushing. Serve the sliced ribs with corn, potatoes, or coleslaw and plenty of napkins.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Ribs on a Charcoal Grill
Redneck Eggrolls

Leftover pulled pork becomes Redneck Eggrolls in 20 minutes, making four servings with crisp wrappers and a smoky filling. Pulled pork, BBQ sauce, and prepared coleslaw are rolled together, sealed with cornstarch, and fried until golden. A heavy-bottomed pot works when a deep fryer is not part of the camp setup. Serve two eggrolls per person with extra BBQ sauce, ranch, or chipotle mayo as a snack before the main meal.
Get the Recipe: Redneck Eggrolls
Grilled Smoked Corn on the Cob

With the husks left on, Grilled Smoked Corn on the Cob needs only fresh corn and smoker pellets for six servings. The cobs smoke at 250°F for one hour, then cool just enough to shuck and serve. Keeping the husks intact protects the kernels while the smoke works through the outside. Put butter, salt, and pepper on the picnic table so kids can season their own corn beside ribs, burgers, or sausage.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Smoked Corn on the Cob
Smoked Berry Crisp

Bubbling berries under an oat topping make Smoked Berry Crisp a 25-minute dessert for four. Blueberries and blackberries are mixed with lemon juice, flour, and brown sugar, then covered with oats, butter, cinnamon, salt, and optional pecans before smoke and heat finish the dish. Individual cast-iron dishes or one oven-safe pan both work. Serve the crisp warm with ice cream after the main fire has settled and everyone is ready for spoons.
Get the Recipe: Smoked Berry Crisp
Grilled Steak Skewers with Mojo Rojo

Spicy red sauce works as both marinade and baste in Grilled Steak Skewers with Mojo Rojo, a 45-minute main that serves four. Thin sirloin strips combine with red bell pepper, ancho chile, arbol chiles, garlic, cumin, red wine vinegar, and olive oil before going onto eight skewers. The small pieces cook quickly over direct and indirect heat. Serve two skewers per person with rice, corn, or a cooling dip for anyone who wants less heat.
Get the Recipe: Grilled Steak Skewers with Mojo Rojo

