Hawaiian Chicken Sheet Pan

Category:Dinner Recipes

Caramelized pineapple, golden chicken thighs, and roasted peppers all on one pan make this Hawaiian Chicken Sheet Pan the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The chicken gets sticky at the edges, the pineapple turns jammy and charred, and the onions soften just enough to soak up the sweet-salty marinade. It’s the sort of meal that feels bright and generous without asking for much from you.

What makes this version work is the balance in the marinade and the way it’s used twice. Soy sauce and sesame oil bring depth, honey gives the glaze something to cling to, and a little pineapple juice reinforces the fruit without making the pan watery. Reserving part of the marinade and brushing it on halfway through builds a glossy finish instead of letting everything steam in one puddle.

Below, I’ll walk through the small choices that keep the pineapple caramelized and the chicken browned instead of soggy. There’s also a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s in the fridge.

The pineapple browned beautifully instead of turning mushy, and the chicken thighs stayed juicy even with the sweet glaze. My husband kept going back for the charred onions and asked me to put it in the regular rotation.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Caramelized pineapple and golden chicken thighs make this sheet pan dinner a keeper for busy nights.

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The trick to keeping the pineapple charred instead of watery

The main mistake with fruit on a sheet pan is crowding it into steam. Pineapple gives off juice as it heats, and if the pieces are packed too tightly or mixed into a wet marinade for too long, you lose those caramelized edges and end up with soft fruit. This recipe avoids that by coating the chicken and pineapple lightly, then spreading everything across a hot pan so the heat can actually hit the surface.

Chicken thighs help here because they stay tender even when the marinade runs sweet. If you use chicken breast, cut the pieces larger than you think and pull them as soon as they reach temperature, because breast meat dries out fast under a sugary glaze. The pan should smell toasted and tangy by the end, not wet and steamy.

What each ingredient is actually doing in this dish

Hawaiian Chicken Sheet Pan caramelized pineapple golden chicken
  • Chicken thighs — These stay juicy at the high oven temperature needed for browning. Boneless, skinless thighs are the right choice here because they cook quickly and keep their texture under the glaze.
  • Fresh pineapple — Fresh gives you the best caramelized edges and a cleaner, brighter flavor. Canned pineapple works in a pinch, but drain it well and pat it dry so the pan doesn’t turn syrupy.
  • Soy sauce — This is the salt and savoriness that keeps the dish from tasting like straight honey. Low-sodium soy sauce is fine if that’s what you keep on hand.
  • Honey — It helps the marinade cling and encourages browning in the oven. Maple syrup can stand in, but the glaze will taste a little deeper and less tropical.
  • Pineapple juice — Just enough to reinforce the fruit without thinning the sauce too much. If yours is extra sweet, the dish can taste flat, so use unsweetened if possible.
  • Sesame oil — A small amount adds a toasted note that makes the marinade taste fuller. Don’t swap in a neutral oil unless you have to; you’ll lose that depth.
  • Bell peppers and red onion — They add color and soften into sweet, roasted bites. Cut them into substantial pieces so they don’t burn before the chicken finishes.

Getting the glaze on at the right moment

Mix the marinade until the honey disappears

Whisk the soy sauce, honey, pineapple juice, garlic, ginger, and sesame oil until the mixture looks smooth and glossy. If streaks of honey are still sitting at the bottom, they’ll cling unevenly to the chicken and burn in spots. A fully blended marinade coats better and browns more evenly.

Coat the chicken and pineapple, but don’t drown them

Toss the chicken thighs and pineapple chunks with most of the marinade, keeping back a little for brushing later. That reserved portion matters because it gives you fresh glaze on top instead of baking the same sauce twice until it turns dull. If the chicken looks submerged, there’s too much liquid for a sheet pan and the vegetables will steam.

Roast hot enough to brown fast

Spread everything in a single layer on the foil-lined pan and roast at 425°F. That temperature is doing the work here: it helps the chicken caramelize before the pineapple loses all its structure. Halfway through, brush on the reserved marinade and rotate the pan if your oven has hot spots. The chicken is done when the thickest pieces reach 165°F and the edges are sticky and browned.

How to adapt it when you need a different version

Gluten-free version

Use tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce in place of regular soy sauce. The flavor stays the same, and the glaze still reduces the same way, so you won’t lose any of the sticky finish.

Bone-in chicken thighs

Bone-in thighs work, but they need longer in the oven and the vegetables may get a little more color than with boneless. Start checking them around 35 minutes and pull them when the meat near the bone reaches temperature.

Lower-sugar version

Cut the honey back by a tablespoon and lean on the pineapple for sweetness. The glaze won’t be quite as sticky, but the dish will still brown well if you keep the oven hot and don’t overcrowd the pan.

Dairy-free and weeknight-friendly

This recipe is naturally dairy-free, which is part of why it works so well for quick dinners. Serve it over rice and finish with green onions and sesame seeds; that little bit of freshness keeps the whole pan from tasting heavy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The pineapple softens a little, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: Freeze the chicken and vegetables for up to 2 months, though the pineapple will be softer after thawing. Cool completely before freezing and use a shallow container so it chills fast.
  • Reheating: Warm in a 350°F oven until hot, or use a skillet over medium-low heat. The common mistake is blasting it in the microwave, which turns the chicken rubbery and the pineapple mushy.

Answers to the questions worth asking

Can I use canned pineapple instead of fresh? +

Yes, but drain it very well and pat the pieces dry before they go on the pan. Fresh pineapple browns better because it holds less liquid, so canned fruit will be softer and a little less caramelized.

How do I keep the chicken from drying out? +

Use boneless thighs if you can, since they stay tender under high heat. If you use chicken breast, cut it into larger pieces and pull it the moment it reaches 165°F; the sugar in the marinade makes it brown fast, which can fool you into thinking it needs more time.

Can I prep Hawaiian Chicken Sheet Pan ahead of time? +

You can whisk the marinade and chop the vegetables a day ahead. I’d wait to toss the pineapple with the marinade until closer to baking time so it doesn’t sit in acid and lose its texture.

How do I know when the sheet pan dinner is done? +

The chicken should hit 165°F in the thickest part, and the pineapple should look browned at the edges, not pale and wet. If the vegetables are ready before the chicken, keep them in place; they’ll keep roasting without losing much, but undercooked chicken needs a few more minutes.

Can I serve this without rice? +

Yes. It also works with quinoa, coconut rice, or even tucked into lettuce cups if you want something lighter. Rice is just the easiest way to catch the extra glaze from the pan.

Hawaiian Chicken Sheet Pan

Hawaiian chicken sheet pan with caramelized pineapple chunks and golden roasted chicken thighs, all baked on one foil-lined sheet pan. Roasted bell peppers and red onion char at the edges while the sticky marinade glazes everything for a tropical, weeknight dinner.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 680

Ingredients
  

Hawaiian chicken sheet pan
  • 1.5 lb boneless skinless chicken thighs
  • 2 cup fresh pineapple chunks
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 1 yellow bell pepper
  • 1 red onion
  • 0.25 cup soy sauce
  • 3 tbsp honey
  • 2 tbsp pineapple juice
  • 2 garlic minced
  • 1 tsp ginger powder
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil
  • 0.25 salt to taste
  • 0.25 black pepper to taste
  • 0.25 sliced green onions for garnish
  • 0.25 sesame seeds for garnish
  • 1 rice for serving

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and preheat
  1. Preheat the oven to 425°F and line a large sheet pan with foil to prevent sticking and speed cleanup.
Make the marinade
  1. Whisk soy sauce, honey, pineapple juice, garlic, ginger powder, and sesame oil together until smooth and glossy.
Combine and arrange
  1. Toss chicken thighs and pineapple chunks with 3/4 of the marinade, reserving the rest for halfway brushing.
Roast
  1. Spread the chicken on the sheet pan and scatter bell peppers, red onion, and the remaining pineapple around it for even roasting.
Finish roasting and glaze
  1. Roast for 22–25 minutes total at 425°F, brushing with the reserved marinade halfway through, until the chicken is cooked and caramelized with browned edges.
Garnish and serve
  1. Top with sliced green onions and sesame seeds, then serve over rice while hot.

Notes

For the best caramelization, place chicken and pineapple cut-sides down on the sheet pan so the edges char and glisten; use a rimmed sheet pan for overflow. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 3 days; reheat in a 350°F oven until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended for best pineapple texture. For a gluten-free option, swap soy sauce with gluten-free tamari.

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