Glossy chicken, caramelized edges, and just enough sweetness to make the pineapple taste brighter instead of louder — that’s what keeps these Honey Garlic Asian Chicken Kabobs in the regular rotation. They grill fast, they look great on a platter, and the glaze clings to every bite instead of running straight onto the coals.
The trick is in the marinade balance. Honey gives you shine and that sticky finish, soy sauce brings salt and depth, and rice vinegar keeps the whole thing from turning cloying. I also like reserving part of the marinade for basting, but only because it never touches the raw chicken again once the skewers hit the grill. That extra step is what gives you layers of flavor instead of a one-note glaze.
Below, I’ll walk through the one spot where kabobs usually go wrong, plus the small marinating and grilling details that keep the chicken juicy and the vegetables charred at the edges.
The marinade caramelized beautifully on the grill, and the chicken stayed juicy even with the honey in it. I used the pineapple and bell peppers, and the whole tray disappeared before I could even get a second skewer.
Save these honey garlic Asian chicken kabobs for the nights when you want sticky grilled skewers with pineapple and sesame in under 30 minutes of cook time.
The Marinade Needs Balance, Not Just Sweetness
Honey is doing more than making the kabobs shiny. It helps the chicken brown, but if you lean too hard on it, the outside will scorch before the inside cooks through. That’s why the soy sauce and rice vinegar matter here: soy deepens the flavor, and vinegar keeps the glaze from turning sticky in the wrong way.
The other mistake I see a lot is marinating too long. With cubed chicken breast, 1 to 4 hours is the sweet spot. Less than that and the flavor stays on the surface; much longer and the texture can start to soften in an odd, spongy way because of the vinegar and salt.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Kabobs

- Chicken breasts — These cook quickly and stay tender when cut into even cubes. Thighs work too if you want a richer bite, but breasts give you that clean, grill-friendly finish and hold the glaze well.
- Honey — This is what gives the kabobs their glossy coating and helps the edges caramelize. You can swap in brown sugar in a pinch, but you won’t get the same lacquered look or the same cling on the grill.
- Soy sauce — This carries the savory backbone of the marinade. Use low-sodium if that’s what you keep on hand, since the glaze reduces as it cooks and can taste saltier than it looks in the bowl.
- Rice vinegar — This keeps the honey from tasting flat and heavy. If you need a substitute, use apple cider vinegar in a smaller amount; it’s sharper, so don’t match it 1:1 without tasting first.
- Sesame oil, garlic, and ginger — These give the kabobs their Asian fusion character. Toasted sesame oil is the flavor you want here, and fresh ginger makes a big difference compared with dried.
- Pineapple, peppers, and onions — These aren’t just filler. Pineapple picks up the glaze and adds juice, while the peppers and onions char at the edges and break up the sweetness so the skewers taste balanced instead of sticky.
Building the Glaze So It Cooks On, Not Off
Whisk the marinade until the honey disappears
Start by whisking the honey, soy sauce, garlic, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and ginger until the mixture looks smooth and loose, not streaky. If the honey sits in ribbons at the bottom, it won’t coat the chicken evenly and you’ll end up with some pieces over-salted and others under-seasoned. Reserve the basting portion before the chicken goes in so you never have to second-guess food safety later.
Thread the skewers with room for heat
Build each skewer with chicken, peppers, onions, and pineapple tucked close together but not jammed tight. If the pieces are packed too firmly, the grill steam-cooks them instead of giving you char. Soak wooden skewers first, then leave a little space at the ends so you can turn them without the food sliding around.
Grill for color, then finish with the last basting
Cook over medium-high heat for about 5 to 6 minutes per side, brushing with the reserved marinade as the kabobs develop color. If the grill is too hot, the honey will darken before the chicken cooks through, so look for deep grill marks and opaque chicken at the edges before you call them done. The kabobs are ready when the chicken is firm, juicy, and no longer pink in the center.
Turn It Into a Full Grill Night
Add zucchini or mushrooms if you want more vegetables on the skewers, but cut them to a size that matches the chicken so everything finishes together. Softer vegetables will pick up the glaze beautifully, though they won’t hold their shape quite as firmly as peppers and onions.
Make It Gluten-Free
Use tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce in place of regular soy sauce. The flavor stays savory and balanced, and you won’t lose the sticky glaze that makes the kabobs work.
Swap the Chicken for Shrimp
Shrimp works if you want a faster cook, but cut the marinating time way down to about 15 to 20 minutes. Any longer and the vinegar and salt can start to change the texture before the shrimp ever hits the grill.
Use Thighs for a Richer Bite
Chicken thighs stay juicier on a hot grill and handle a little extra charring without drying out. They do take slightly longer than breasts, so give them a minute or two more per side and watch for the juices to run clear.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The glaze will thicken a bit and the pineapple will soften, but the flavor holds up well.
- Freezer: Freeze the cooked chicken and vegetables off the skewers for up to 2 months. The texture of the peppers and pineapple will be softer after thawing, so I’d freeze these only if you don’t mind a less crisp result.
- Reheating: Warm in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of water, or use a 300°F oven until heated through. Don’t blast them in the microwave too long or the chicken will turn rubbery and the honey glaze can get tacky in a bad way.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Honey Garlic Asian Chicken Kabobs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk honey, soy sauce, garlic, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and ginger until smooth and combined.
- Reserve 1/4 cup of the marinade for basting and set it aside.
- Marinate the chicken in the remaining marinade for 1-4 hours in the refrigerator, keeping it covered.
- Thread chicken, bell peppers, onions, and pineapple chunks onto soaked wooden skewers, alternating for even grilling.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat and grill the kabobs for 5-6 minutes per side, basting with the reserved marinade as you turn them.
- Continue grilling until the chicken is cooked through and the glaze looks glossy and lightly caramelized, then move to a platter to garnish.
- Sprinkle sesame seeds and top with green onions right before serving for visible garnish.


