Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs

Category:Dinner Recipes

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs hit that sweet spot between smoky grilled chicken and a creamy, spicy sauce that clings to every bite. The chicken stays juicy, the peppers and onions pick up a little char, and the bang bang sauce brings the kind of tangy heat that keeps people reaching for one more skewer. It’s the sort of dinner that looks like you worked harder than you did.

What makes these kabobs work is balance. The chicken gets a simple oil, salt, and pepper seasoning before grilling, which keeps the sauce from having to do all the work. The sauce itself leans on mayonnaise for body, sweet chili sauce for sweetness and a little body, and sriracha for heat, with just enough honey to round the edges. That combination gives you a drizzle that tastes bold without turning harsh or thin.

Below, I’m walking through the one grilling detail that keeps the chicken from drying out, plus a couple of easy swaps if you want to change the heat level or make the recipe fit what’s already in your kitchen.

The sauce thickened up perfectly on the warm chicken, and the skewers came off the grill with just enough char to taste smoky without drying out. I’ve made these twice already and the peppers held their bite both times.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save these Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs for a grill-night dinner with smoky chicken, crisp vegetables, and that creamy sweet-heat sauce.

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The Trick to Keeping the Chicken Juicy Over a Hot Grill

The mistake most kabobs make is treating the skewer like a tiny frying pan. Chicken breast cooks fast, and once it goes dry, the sauce can’t hide it. Medium-high heat gives you color before the meat overcooks, and cutting the chicken into even cubes matters more than almost anything else here.

The vegetables help, but they don’t protect the chicken from overcooking. What does help is pulling the skewers as soon as the chicken is opaque all the way through and the juices run clear. If you wait for dark grill marks before checking, you’re already flirting with dry chicken.

  • Even chicken cubes — Keep the pieces close to the same size so they finish at the same time. Big chunks need longer on the grill, and that’s where the smaller ones start drying out.
  • Olive oil — This gives the seasoning something to cling to and helps the chicken color without sticking. You don’t need much, just enough to lightly coat the surface.
  • Bell peppers and onions — These add sweetness and texture, and they also give the kabobs more visual appeal. Cut them in pieces that are large enough to stay on the skewer and small enough to cook in the same window as the chicken.
  • Soaked wooden skewers — If they’re not soaked, they can scorch on a hot grill. Thirty minutes in water is enough to keep them from burning before the chicken is done.

What the Sauce Is Doing Besides Bringing the Heat

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs creamy spicy grilled skewers
  • Mayonnaise — This is the base that makes the sauce spoonable and clingy. If you swap it for something thinner, like plain yogurt, the sauce will loosen and won’t coat the kabobs the same way.
  • Sweet chili sauce — This brings sweetness, garlic, and a little tang all at once. It’s the ingredient that gives bang bang sauce its signature flavor, so this is not the place to replace it with plain hot sauce.
  • Sriracha — This is where the heat lives. Start with the amount listed, then adjust after tasting if you want the sauce milder or sharper.
  • Honey — Just a tablespoon softens the heat and gives the sauce a rounder finish. Leave it out only if your sweet chili sauce is already very sweet.

Grilling, Saucing, and Serving Without Losing the Best Parts

Seasoning the Chicken First

Toss the cubed chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper before anything else. That light coating keeps the meat from sticking to the grill and gives it a better crust. If the chicken looks wet and slick, it hasn’t been seasoned evenly enough; every piece should have a thin sheen, not a puddle of oil.

Building the Skewers

Thread the chicken and vegetables onto the soaked skewers with a little space between pieces. Tight packing traps steam, and steam is the enemy of grill marks. Keep the chicken and vegetables in roughly similar-sized pieces so the onions don’t turn mushy while the chicken is still catching up.

Grilling Over Medium-High Heat

Set the kabobs over medium-high heat and grill for 5 to 6 minutes per side, turning once you get color on the underside. The goal is a browned edge and opaque centers, not a hard crust. If the grill is too hot, the outside chars before the inside cooks through, so move them to a slightly cooler spot if flare-ups start.

Mixing and Finishing with the Sauce

Stir the mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey together until smooth. Spoon or drizzle the sauce over the hot kabobs right before serving so it loosens slightly and clings to the chicken. If you sauce them too early, the heat can make the coating slide off instead of staying glossy on the meat.

How to Adjust the Heat, the Protein, or the Grill Setup

Make It Milder Without Losing the Bang Bang Flavor

Cut the sriracha back by half and add a little more honey if you want the sauce sweeter and less sharp. The result is still creamy and tangy, but the heat stays in the background instead of taking over.

Swap in Chicken Thighs for Richer, More Forgiving Kabobs

Boneless thighs work well if you want a juicier result and a little more wiggle room on the grill. They take about the same time, but they stay tender longer, which is helpful if your grill runs hot.

Make It Dairy-Free and Gluten-Free with One Quick Check

This recipe is naturally dairy-free as written, since the sauce uses mayonnaise instead of yogurt or sour cream. For gluten-free cooking, check that your sweet chili sauce and sriracha are certified gluten-free if cross-contact matters for you.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the cooked kabobs and sauce separately for up to 3 days. The chicken stays best when the sauce isn’t sitting on it overnight.
  • Freezer: The cooked chicken and vegetables freeze, but the texture softens after thawing. Freeze the kabobs without sauce for the best result, then make the sauce fresh.
  • Reheating: Reheat the chicken gently in a 325°F oven or in a skillet over medium-low heat. High heat dries out the chicken fast, and microwaving the sauced kabobs can make the sauce separate.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs ahead of time?+

Yes. You can cube the chicken, cut the vegetables, and mix the sauce a day ahead, then store everything separately until grilling time. I’d wait to thread the skewers until closer to cooking so the vegetables stay crisp and the chicken doesn’t sit too long in its seasoning.

How do I know when the chicken is done on the grill?+

The chicken should be opaque all the way through with no pink in the center, and the juices should run clear when you cut into the thickest piece. If you have a thermometer, aim for 165°F at the center of the largest cube. Pulling it right at that point keeps it juicy.

Can I bake these instead of grilling them?+

Yes. Bake the skewers on a lined sheet pan at 425°F, turning once halfway through, until the chicken reaches 165°F. You won’t get the same smoky char, but you’ll still get tender chicken and a sauce that tastes just as bold.

How do I keep the sauce from getting watery?+

Use full-fat mayonnaise and stir the sauce until it’s completely smooth before drizzling it on. If the kabobs are dripping with grill juices, pat them lightly with a paper towel first so the sauce stays thick and glossy instead of sliding off.

Can I use metal skewers instead of wooden ones?+

Yes, and they’re a little easier because you don’t have to soak them first. Metal skewers conduct heat, though, so handle them carefully when the kabobs come off the grill. The cooking time stays the same.

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs with creamy spicy bang bang sauce—grilled until juicy, then drizzled with a sweet chili and sriracha blend. Ideal for spicy skewers with a glossy orange-white sauce look, topped with green onions and sesame seeds.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
marinating 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 2 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Asian-American
Calories: 620

Ingredients
  

Chicken kabobs
  • 2 lb chicken breasts
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 0.25 salt
  • 0.25 pepper
  • 1 bell peppers for skewering
  • 1 onions for skewering
  • 1 wooden skewers soaked
Bang Bang Sauce
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 0.25 cup sweet chili sauce
  • 2 tbsp sriracha
  • 1 tbsp honey
  • 1 green onions for garnish
  • 1 sesame seeds for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 grill

Method
 

Marinate and season
  1. Lightly coat the cubed chicken with olive oil, then season with salt and pepper and let it marinate for 30 minutes (room temperature or chilled, covered).
  2. Soak wooden skewers while the chicken marinates to prevent burning on the grill.
Assemble the kabobs
  1. Thread chicken cubes and bell peppers and onions onto the skewers, alternating pieces for even cooking and grill marks.
Grill
  1. Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for 5-6 minutes per side, turning once, until the chicken is cooked through and the edges look lightly charred.
Make and finish with sauce
  1. Stir together mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey until smooth and creamy.
  2. Drizzle the bang bang sauce over the hot grilled kabobs so it clings like a creamy orange-white glaze.
  3. Top with green onions and sesame seeds for a fresh, toasted finish.

Notes

For the best kabob texture, cut chicken into similar-sized cubes so they cook in the same time window. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 3 days; freeze chicken kabobs (sauce on the side) for up to 2 months. To make it less sweet, reduce honey to 2 tsp and add an extra 1 tsp sweet chili sauce instead to keep the flavor balanced.

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