Key West Grilled Chicken

Category:Dinner Recipes

Citrus-marinated chicken gets its best texture from a marinade that leans bright instead of heavy. The lime and orange wake up the meat, the honey helps the edges brown, and the grill gives you those charred spots that taste like summer without turning the chicken dry. What you end up with is juicy chicken with a clean, tropical finish that still tastes like actual dinner, not a sauce-covered shortcut.

The trick here is balance. Key lime juice brings a sharper, more floral tang than standard lime, but regular lime works well if that’s what you have. Orange juice softens the edges and keeps the marinade from tasting too aggressive, while a little cumin and garlic give the chicken enough backbone to stand up to the grill. Letting it marinate for at least two hours makes a real difference; less than that and the citrus won’t have time to do its job.

Below, I’ve included the one grilling cue that matters most, plus a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s already in the kitchen.

The chicken came off the grill so juicy, and the citrus marinade made the outside caramelize without burning. I used regular lime and it still had that bright Key West flavor everyone kept asking about.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this Key West Grilled Chicken for the nights when you want smoky grill marks, a bright citrus marinade, and dinner that feels special with almost no fuss.

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The Marinade Needs Time, Not Just Heat

This chicken tastes bright on the outside and stays juicy inside because the marinade is doing two jobs at once. The acid from the limes and orange starts seasoning the meat, but it also needs enough time to move past the surface before the grill takes over. If you rush it, the flavor stays shallow and the chicken can taste more grilled than marinated.

Two hours is the minimum sweet spot here. Go up to six hours for deeper citrus flavor, but don’t push it overnight, especially if you’re using a lot of lime juice, because the texture can turn tight and a little cured at the edges. That’s the line between tender and oddly firm.

What the Citrus, Honey, and Cumin Each Bring to the Grill

Key West Grilled Chicken citrus-marinated tropical
  • Key lime juice — This gives the chicken its sharp, sunny backbone. Regular lime works if that’s what you have, but Key lime has a little more perfume and a cleaner tartness, which is why the glaze tastes a touch brighter.
  • Orange juice — This keeps the marinade from turning harsh. It adds sweetness and helps the chicken caramelize on the grill instead of just tasting acidic.
  • Honey — This is what helps the edges brown and gives you that light glaze effect without making the chicken sticky. Don’t skip it unless you want a flatter, less rounded finish.
  • Olive oil — Oil helps carry the seasoning and keeps the chicken from sticking to the grates. Any neutral oil works in a pinch, but olive oil fits the profile best.
  • Cumin and garlic — These keep the dish grounded. Without them, the marinade can taste too thin and citrus-only.

Getting the Grill Marks Without Drying Out the Chicken

Mixing the Marinade

Whisk the lime juice, orange juice, olive oil, garlic, honey, cumin, salt, and pepper until the honey dissolves and the mixture looks unified, not streaky. If the honey clings to the bottom of the bowl, it won’t coat the chicken evenly. The marinade should smell sharp, sweet, and a little savory all at once.

Marinating the Chicken

Add the chicken pieces and turn them until every side is coated. Cover and refrigerate for 2 to 6 hours. If your chicken is cut into smaller, uneven pieces, some parts will marinate faster than others, so stir or turn the pieces once halfway through if you can.

Grilling Over Medium-High Heat

Preheat the grill well before the chicken goes on. You want hot grates so the meat sears on contact and releases cleanly; if the grates are lukewarm, the sugar in the honey is more likely to stick and burn before the chicken cooks through. Grill until the thickest part reaches 165°F and the juices run clear, then pull it off right away.

Resting and Finishing

Let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before serving. That short pause keeps the juices in the meat instead of running out onto the plate. Finish with cilantro and lime wedges so the last bite tastes fresh, not just grilled.

How to Adapt This for Different Grills, Diets, and Busy Nights

Regular lime instead of Key lime

Regular lime gives you a slightly less floral, more familiar citrus bite. The chicken still tastes bright and tropical, but the finish is a little less nuanced. If that’s what’s in the fridge, use it without changing anything else.

Dairy-free and naturally gluten-free

This recipe already fits both of those needs as written. The only thing to watch is what you serve alongside it or any bottled seasoning blends you add later, since some can hide gluten or dairy-based fillers.

Chicken breasts instead of mixed pieces

Boneless chicken breasts work, but they cook faster and dry out more easily than darker pieces or bone-in cuts. Pound them to an even thickness and start checking temperature early so you still get juiciness instead of stringy breast meat.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 4 days. The citrus flavor stays good, though the grilled edges soften a bit.
  • Freezer: It freezes well for up to 2 months if you wrap it tightly and freeze it in portions. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator so the texture stays tender.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of water or broth, or warm it in a 300°F oven until just heated through. High heat dries out grilled chicken fast, especially pieces that were already cooked to 165°F the first time.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I marinate this chicken overnight?+

I wouldn’t. The lime juice is strong enough that an overnight soak can make the outside of the chicken turn a little mushy or cured. Two to six hours gives you the bright flavor without changing the texture.

How do I keep the chicken from sticking to the grill?+

Start with clean, hot grates and lightly oil them right before the chicken goes on. The honey in the marinade can cling if the heat is too low, so let the grill preheat fully and don’t move the chicken too soon. Once it sears, it usually releases on its own.

Can I bake this instead of grilling it?+

Yes. Bake it at 425°F on a lined sheet pan until the chicken reaches 165°F, then finish under the broiler for a minute or two if you want a little color. You won’t get the same smoky char, but the citrus marinade still works well.

How do I know when the chicken is done?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and pull the chicken when the thickest part hits 165°F. If you wait for the meat to look dry all the way through, it’ll usually be overcooked by the time you serve it. Temperature is the reliable cue here, not color alone.

Can I use chicken breasts for Key West Grilled Chicken?+

Yes, but they need a little extra care because they dry out faster than thighs or mixed pieces. Pound them to an even thickness and watch the temperature closely so they stay juicy. I’d start checking a few minutes early rather than waiting for the clock.

Key West Grilled Chicken

Key West grilled chicken with citrus marinade and a glossy Key lime glaze, cooked over island-style high heat for charred edges. The tropical flavor comes from lime and orange juice plus honey, then finishes with cilantro and lime wedges.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
marinating 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 40 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Caribbean-American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Key West citrus marinade and garnish
  • 2 lb chicken pieces
  • 0.25 cup Key lime juice (or regular lime)
  • 0.25 cup orange juice
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 garlic, minced
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 0.25 tsp salt
  • 0.25 tsp pepper
  • 0.25 cup fresh cilantro
  • 6 lime wedges

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make the citrus marinade
  1. Whisk together Key lime juice, orange juice, olive oil, garlic, honey, cumin, salt, and pepper until smooth and glossy, with no honey streaks visible.
  2. Transfer the marinade to a shallow dish or bowl so it can coat the chicken evenly.
Marinate
  1. Add chicken pieces to the marinade, turning to coat, then cover and refrigerate for 2-6 hours until the surface looks uniformly tinted.
Grill
  1. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat and lightly oil the grates.
  2. Grill chicken over medium-high heat until internal temperature reaches 165°F, about 10-15 minutes per side depending on thickness, until visible char appears on edges.
Rest and serve
  1. Transfer chicken to a plate and let rest 5 minutes so juices settle and the glaze looks slightly set.
  2. Garnish with fresh cilantro and serve with lime wedges for bright finish.

Notes

For maximum flavor, marinate in the refrigerator for the longer end (up to 6 hours). Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container up to 3-4 days; freeze cooked chicken up to 2 months for best texture. Vegetarian swap: replace chicken with thick-cut grilled halloumi or pressed tofu and marinate the same way, then grill until browned and heated through.

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