Juicy grilled chicken, smoky peppers, and onions, and a creamy sweet-heat sauce make these bang bang chicken kabobs the kind of dinner people hover around before the platter even hits the table. The chicken stays tender because it’s cooked fast over medium-high heat, then finished with a sauce that clings instead of sliding off in a puddle.
The key is keeping the chicken pieces close to the same size so they cook at the same pace, and not brushing on the bang bang sauce until after grilling. Mayo-based sauces can loosen fast on a hot grill, so I mix the sauce separately and drizzle it on at the end for the best texture and the cleanest flavor.
Below you’ll find the small details that make these kabobs work: how to keep the chicken from drying out, what to swap if you don’t have a grill, and how to adjust the heat without losing that signature sweet chili kick.
The chicken stayed juicy and the sauce had the perfect sweet-spicy balance. I loved that the kabobs only needed a few minutes per side and the veggies still had a little char without getting mushy.
Love these sweet-heat Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs? Save them for an easy grill-night dinner with juicy chicken and creamy chili sauce.
The Part That Keeps the Chicken Juicy Instead of Dry
Chicken kabobs go wrong when the pieces are cut too small or cooked until every bit of pink is gone. By the time the center looks perfectly opaque, the outside has already lost too much moisture. The sweet spot is medium-high heat and a short grill time, just until the chicken is cooked through and the vegetables pick up char at the edges.
Another thing that matters here is spacing. If the pieces are packed too tightly on the skewer, they steam instead of sear. Leave a little room between chunks so the heat can move around them. That’s what gives you those browned spots and keeps the texture from turning soft.
- Uniform chicken cubes — Cut the chicken into even pieces so everything finishes at the same time. Big chunks leave you waiting on the middle while the smaller ones dry out.
- Olive oil — A light coating helps the seasoning stick and promotes browning on the grill. Don’t drown the chicken or the surface will slick off instead of searing.
- Bell peppers and onions — These add sweetness and structure on the skewer. Red, yellow, or orange peppers all work well; onions should be cut into pieces large enough to stay on the skewer without falling apart.
- Wooden skewers — Soak them long enough that they don’t scorch on the grill. If you skip that step, the ends can burn before the chicken is done.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs

- Chicken breasts — They cook quickly and stay tender if you pull them off the grill as soon as they’re done. Thighs can work too, but they’ll take a little longer and taste richer.
- Mayonnaise — This is what makes the bang bang sauce creamy enough to cling to the kabobs. There isn’t a perfect swap for that texture, but full-fat Greek yogurt can stand in if you want a tangier sauce.
- Sweet chili sauce — This brings sweetness, acidity, and a little garlic heat all at once. It does a lot of the heavy lifting, so choose a good one if you can.
- Sriracha — This sharpens the sauce and keeps it from tasting flat. Add a little more if you want a hotter finish, but taste after mixing because the honey softens the heat.
- Honey — Just enough to round out the chili sauce and help the glaze taste balanced. If your sweet chili sauce is already very sweet, cut the honey back slightly.
Grilling the Kabobs Without Losing the Sauce
Season the Chicken First
Toss the chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper before it goes anywhere near the skewers. That first seasoning layer matters because the grill only has a few minutes to build flavor. If the chicken looks wet and slick, it won’t brown as well, so keep the coating light.
Thread for Even Cooking
Alternate chicken and vegetables in a way that keeps the pieces close in size. Smaller chunks cook too fast and can dry out before the peppers soften, while oversized chunks leave you with uneven skewer times. Don’t cram everything tightly together; a little space gives you better char.
Mix the Sauce Separately
Stir the mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey together in a bowl while the kabobs grill. The sauce should look smooth and glossy. If it tastes too sharp, add a touch more honey; if it feels too mild, another teaspoon of sriracha brings it back.
Finish After the Grill
Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for about 5 to 6 minutes per side, turning once the edges pick up color and the chicken releases from the grates easily. Pull them off when the chicken reaches 165°F in the thickest piece. Drizzle the sauce over the top after grilling, then finish with green onions and sesame seeds so the sauce stays creamy instead of melting away on the heat.
How to Adapt These Kabobs Without Losing the Point
Dairy-Free Sauce Swap
Use a dairy-free mayonnaise and keep the rest of the sauce the same. The texture stays creamy and clingy, which is what matters most here, and you won’t lose the sweet-heat balance.
Lower-Heat Version
Cut the sriracha back to 1 tablespoon and let the sweet chili sauce carry more of the flavor. You’ll still get that bang bang character, just with a softer finish that’s easier for kids or heat-sensitive eaters.
Swap the Grill for the Oven
Bake the skewers on a lined sheet pan at 425°F, turning once halfway through, until the chicken is cooked through. You won’t get the same smoky char, but the sauce and seasoning still land in the same sweet-spicy place.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked kabobs and sauce separately for up to 3 days. The chicken stays juicy, but the vegetables soften a little as they sit.
- Freezer: The grilled chicken and vegetables can be frozen for up to 2 months, though the peppers will lose some texture. Freeze the sauce separately only if you used a full-fat mayonnaise base and expect a slight texture change after thawing.
- Reheating: Warm the kabobs in a 325°F oven, covered loosely with foil, until heated through. Don’t microwave them hard and fast or the chicken edges can dry out before the center warms.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the cubed chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper, then let it marinate for 30 minutes.
- Soak the wooden skewers so they don’t scorch on the grill.
- Thread the chicken and bell peppers and onions onto the soaked skewers, leaving a little space between pieces for even cooking.
- Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for 5-6 minutes per side, turning once, until the chicken is cooked through with lightly charred edges.
- Stir together the mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey until smooth and creamy.
- Drizzle bang bang sauce over the grilled kabobs while they’re hot.
- Garnish with green onions and sesame seeds for a bright finish.


