When the first warm breeze hits our little Midwestern town, the church potluck sign-up sheets start making the rounds, and my neighbor Doris always puts her name down for these tiny foil-wrapped toasted coconut clusters. They’re a funny little mystery—no one sees what’s inside until they pinch open the warm foil parcels, and by then the slow cooker has done all the work. With just four pantry ingredients and no oven to heat up the house, this recipe feels like something our grandmothers would have loved on a spring day: simple, thrifty, and just fancy enough to make folks talk.
Serve these foil-wrapped coconut clusters straight from the warm slow cooker, with the lid propped slightly so guests can reach in and grab a parcel. They’re lovely alongside fresh fruit—think strawberries, pineapple, or melon—and a pot of coffee or iced tea. At potlucks, I set the slow cooker on “warm” at the dessert table and tuck a little bowl of toothpicks nearby so people can nudge the clusters out of the foil if they like. They pair nicely with plain vanilla ice cream or a simple lemon bar, since the toasted coconut and chocolate are rich and sweet on their own.
Slow Cooker Foil-Wrapped Toasted Coconut Clusters
Servings: 18–24 small foil parcels

Ingredients
2 cups sweetened shredded coconut
1 1/2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
1/2 cup chopped pecans (or walnut pieces)
2 tablespoons salted butter, cut into small pieces
Directions
Tear off a roll of regular aluminum foil and cut it into 18–24 small squares, each about 5x5 inches. Set the foil squares in a neat stack near your work area so they’re ready for filling.
In a medium bowl, stir together the sweetened shredded coconut and chopped pecans until they’re evenly mixed. This dry mix will be the crunchy heart of your clusters.
Spoon 1 heaping tablespoon of the coconut-nut mixture into the center of each foil square, forming a little mound. Don’t pack it too tightly; you want some air around it so the heat can move through.
Sprinkle about 1 tablespoon of chocolate chips over each coconut mound. If a few chips roll off, just nudge them back toward the center with your fingers.
Dot the top of each little pile with a very small piece of salted butter—just a pinch on each one. The butter helps the chocolate melt smoothly and gives that old-fashioned richness Midwestern desserts are known for.
To close the parcels, bring the four corners of the foil up over the filling and pinch them together at the top, then pinch down the seams so each one is loosely but completely sealed. You’re aiming for little foil pouches with a bit of headroom inside, not tight balls.
Arrange the foil parcels in a single snug layer in the bottom of your slow cooker, pinched tops facing up. If you have more parcels than will fit in one layer, you can gently stack a second layer on top.
Cover the slow cooker with its lid and cook on LOW for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, or just until the chocolate is melted and the coconut is fragrant and lightly toasted. You may smell a warm, nutty aroma when they’re ready—lift one parcel with tongs, carefully open it, and check that the chocolate is soft and the coconut has a light golden color around the edges.
Once done, switch the slow cooker to WARM. Close the test parcel back up and return it to the pot, or enjoy that one as the cook’s treat. Keep the rest of the parcels covered in the slow cooker so they stay gently warm for serving.
To serve, set the slow cooker on the potluck table with a small spoon or tongs beside it. Guests can lift out a warm foil parcel, pinch it open at the top, and either eat the toasted coconut cluster straight from the foil or tip it onto a small plate. If you’d like, place a single toasted coconut flake on top of each closed parcel for a pretty hint of what’s inside without giving away the full secret.
Variations & Tips
For a nuttier version, swap the pecans for chopped almonds and add a tiny drop of almond extract to the coconut mixture before filling the foil squares. If you’re cooking for folks who can’t have nuts, simply leave them out and increase the coconut to 2 1/2 cups; the clusters will still toast beautifully and taste like a Mounds bar in foil. You can also use dark chocolate chips for a less-sweet treat, or white chocolate chips for a sweeter, candy-shop feel (just watch closely, as white chocolate can scorch more easily). If you prefer a chewier texture, stir 2–3 tablespoons of mini marshmallows into the coconut mixture before scooping, and shorten the cook time slightly so they melt without disappearing. For larger gatherings, the recipe doubles easily—just be sure your slow cooker can hold two generous layers of parcels, and rotate the top and bottom layers halfway through for even toasting. To dress them up for holidays, tuck a few colored sprinkles or a single dried cherry into each parcel before closing; when guests pinch them open, they’ll get a little pop of color along with the warm, toasty coconut.