Grilled hot honey chicken earns its place on the table fast: the chicken picks up a sticky, caramelized glaze on the outside while staying juicy in the middle, and the sweet corn salad cuts through every bit of that heat with freshness and crunch. It’s the kind of dinner that tastes like you worked harder than you did.
The trick is in the balance. Honey gives you shine and browning, but it can burn if the grill is too hot, so the chicken needs steady medium heat and a close eye during basting. The corn salad uses grilled corn, which brings a little smoke and sweetness that raw corn just can’t match, and lime juice keeps the whole plate from leaning too rich.
Below, I’ll walk you through the few details that matter most: how to keep the glaze from scorching, how to get the best char on the corn, and what to change if you want to turn this into a meal prep lunch or swap the heat level up or down.
The chicken got that sticky charred edge I was hoping for, and the corn salad was bright enough to balance the heat. I would absolutely make this again.
Save this grilled hot honey chicken and sweet corn salad for a sticky, smoky dinner with fresh summer crunch.
The Sticky Glaze Needs Medium Heat, Not a Blast Furnace
Hot honey sounds like it wants aggressive heat, but this is the kind of glaze that rewards patience. Honey thickens and darkens fast, and once it crosses from caramelized to burnt, the whole chicken tastes bitter. Medium grill heat gives you those browned edges without sacrificing the sweet finish that makes the dish work.
The other trap is basting too early. If you start brushing on the marinade before the chicken has taken on a little color, the sugars sit on the surface and scorch. Let the chicken grill first, then baste during the last few minutes so the glaze clings and tightens instead of smoking off.
- Chicken breasts — Pound them lightly to an even thickness if one end is much thicker than the other. That keeps the meat from drying out while you wait for the center to finish.
- Honey — This is what gives you the lacquered finish. Maple syrup can work in a pinch, but it tastes less floral and won’t set up with the same glossy stickiness.
- Hot sauce — Use a sauce you already like on its own, because the heat stays noticeable after grilling. A milder sauce gives a rounder sweetness; a sharper vinegar-forward one makes the chicken taste brighter.
- Olive oil — It loosens the marinade and helps the chicken brown instead of sticking. You don’t need a pricey bottle here; save the good finishing oil for the salad.
What the Corn Salad Is Doing Beside the Chicken

- Grilled corn — This is the backbone of the salad. Grill it until you get a few browned kernels and that unmistakable sweet-smoky aroma; canned or frozen corn won’t give you the same snap or char.
- Cherry tomatoes — They add juice and acidity, which keeps the salad from feeling one-note. Halve them so their juices mingle with the lime dressing instead of rolling around whole.
- Red onion — A small dice is enough. If yours is sharp, soak it in cold water for 10 minutes, then drain well so it doesn’t dominate the bowl.
- Basil and lime juice — Basil brings a soft herbal note that plays well with honey, and lime keeps the salad bright. Fresh lime is worth using here; bottled juice tastes flat next to the grilled corn.
Building the Char, Then Keeping the Chicken Juicy
Mix the Marinade
Stir the honey, hot sauce, olive oil, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks smooth and pourable. It should coat a spoon in a thin layer, not sit there like syrup. If the honey is too stiff, warm it for a few seconds so it blends cleanly. Don’t add the chicken before the marinade is fully mixed or the heat will be uneven on the grill.
Let the Chicken Take on Flavor
Marinate the chicken for at least 30 minutes and up to 2 hours. That window is enough to season the surface without making the texture soft or muddy. If you go much longer, the honey starts to work against the grain of the meat instead of helping it. Keep the chicken cold while it rests, then let the excess marinade drip off before it goes on the grill.
Grill to Color, Not Guesswork
Lay the chicken on a medium-hot grill and leave it alone long enough to pick up defined grill marks and release cleanly. If it sticks, it isn’t ready to flip yet. Grill about 6 to 7 minutes per side, basting during the last part of cooking so the glaze darkens without burning. Pull the chicken when the thickest part reaches 165°F and let it rest so the juices settle back in.
Toss the Salad at the End
Combine the grilled corn, tomatoes, onion, basil, lime juice, olive oil, salt, and pepper just before serving. The salad should taste bright and lightly dressed, not soggy or heavy. If it sits too long, the tomatoes release enough juice to dilute the grilled corn flavor, so mix it close to dinnertime. A final taste with salt is important here because corn needs more seasoning than most people think.
Make It Dairy-Free and Naturally Gluten-Free
This recipe already lands in both camps as written, which is one reason it’s such an easy summer dinner. Just check that your hot sauce is gluten-free if that matters for your table, and you’re set.
Dial the Heat Up or Down
Use 1 tablespoon hot sauce for a gentler burn or 2 tablespoons for a sharper finish. If you want more heat without thinning the marinade, add a pinch of crushed red pepper instead of more liquid hot sauce.
Swap the Chicken Cut
Chicken thighs work well if you want a juicier, more forgiving grill result. They need a little longer on the grill, but they handle the honey glaze better than lean breasts and stay tender even if the heat runs a touch high.
Turn It Into a Make-Ahead Lunch
Cook the chicken and corn ahead, then store them separately from the salad dressing and basil. Reheat the chicken gently so the honey doesn’t harden, then toss the salad fresh when you’re ready to eat.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the chicken and salad separately for up to 3 days. The chicken stays best when it’s covered tightly, and the corn salad will soften a little as it sits.
- Freezer: The grilled chicken freezes well for up to 2 months. The corn salad doesn’t freeze well because the tomatoes and basil turn watery when thawed.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven until just hot. High heat will harden the honey glaze and dry out the breasts before the center warms through.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Grilled Hot Honey Chicken with Sweet Corn Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- In a bowl, mix honey, hot sauce, olive oil, salt, and pepper until the honey loosens and becomes glossy.
- Set the bowl aside so the marinade can coat the chicken evenly during marinating.
- Add chicken breasts to the marinade and turn to coat all sides, then cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes to 2 hours.
- During resting, let the chicken come back to room temperature for about 10 minutes before grilling for more even cook time.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat and oil the grates lightly so the chicken releases cleanly.
- Place chicken on the grill and cook for 6-7 minutes per side, basting with the marinade during cooking until the outside is caramelized and char-kissed.
- Check doneness and rest the chicken briefly on a plate so juices settle before serving.
- Grill the corn ears until lightly charred, then cut the kernels from the cob.
- In a bowl, combine grilled corn, cherry tomatoes, red onion, basil, lime juice, olive oil, salt, and pepper, then toss until glossy and evenly coated.
- Slice or serve the grilled hot honey chicken hot, then top or plate alongside the sweet corn salad.
- Drizzle any remaining hot honey glaze from the basting over the chicken right before serving for a sticky finish.


