Blackstone Hot Honey BBQ Chicken Quesadillas

Category: Dinner Recipes

Smoky, sticky BBQ chicken tucked into a crisp tortilla with molten cheese is already a strong dinner move, but the hot honey pushes these quesadillas into the kind of meal people hover over at the griddle. The edges get shatter-crisp, the center stays saucy, and every wedge gives you that pull of cheese with a little sweet heat on the finish.

This version works because the chicken gets coated before it ever hits the tortilla, so the filling tastes seasoned all the way through instead of just warm. The cheese does double duty here: it melts into the filling and also acts like glue, which keeps the quesadilla together when you flip it on the Blackstone. A quick buttered griddle and medium heat are what give you that even golden crust without burning the tortillas before the cheese melts.

Below, I’ve included the one timing detail that keeps the filling from leaking out, plus a few smart swaps if you want to adjust the heat, cheese, or tortilla choice.

The tortillas got perfectly crisp on the griddle and the BBQ chicken stayed juicy. I added a little extra hot honey at the end and the sweet heat with the ranch dipping sauce was spot on.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save these hot honey BBQ chicken quesadillas for the nights when you want a crispy Blackstone dinner with melty cheese and sticky-sweet heat.

Save to Pinterest

The Hot Honey Needs to Coat the Chicken Before It Hits the Tortilla

The mistake with loaded quesadillas is usually moisture. If the filling goes in wet, the tortilla softens before it ever has a chance to crisp, and the whole thing slides apart when you flip it. Tossing the shredded chicken with BBQ sauce and hot honey first gives you a thick, clingy filling that stays put.

Cheese placement matters just as much. A layer under the chicken helps anchor the filling, and a layer on top melts down into the tortilla on the other side, so the quesadilla seals instead of just sitting there full of loose ingredients. Keep the heat at medium; if the griddle runs too hot, the tortillas brown before the cheese fully melts and you end up with a brittle shell around a cold center.

What the Cheese, Tortilla, and Hot Honey Are Doing Here

Blackstone Hot Honey BBQ Chicken Quesadillas melty crispy sweet-spicy
  • Shredded chicken — Rotisserie chicken works well here because it’s already tender and easy to shred fine enough to spread evenly. If you cook your own, keep it juicy; dry chicken turns stringy once it gets bound with BBQ sauce.
  • BBQ sauce — This is the backbone of the filling, so use one you’d actually want to eat on its own. A thicker sauce clings better and keeps the quesadillas from getting watery.
  • Hot honey — This gives you the sweet heat that makes the filling taste finished. If you don’t have it, mix honey with a few dashes of hot sauce; it won’t be as rounded, but it does the job.
  • Flour tortillas — Large flour tortillas hold up best on a griddle and crisp without cracking. Smaller tortillas are harder to fill evenly and can tear when you press them down.
  • Cheddar and Monterey Jack — Cheddar brings flavor, while Monterey Jack melts smoothly and keeps the filling gooey. If you use only cheddar, the melt will be a little less stretchy and a bit more greasy.
  • Red onion — A small amount adds bite and crunch so the filling isn’t all soft texture. Dice it fine so it softens slightly on the griddle instead of staying sharp and raw-tasting.
  • Butter — Butter on the griddle gives the tortillas a deeper, richer crust than oil alone. Use enough to coat the surface, not enough to fry the tortillas.

How to Build the Quesadilla So It Stays Crisp and Melts All the Way Through

Mix the Filling First

Toss the shredded chicken with the BBQ sauce and half the hot honey before anything goes on the griddle. The filling should look coated, not soupy; if it’s dripping sauce, the quesadilla will leak. This is the point where you can taste and adjust the heat, because once the cheese goes in, the filling won’t change much.

Start With Cheese on the Tortilla

Lay the tortillas on the buttered griddle and scatter cheese over half of each one before adding the chicken mixture. That first layer of cheese melts directly against the tortilla and acts like a barrier, which keeps the sauce from soaking through. Add the onion and chicken in a fairly even layer so the quesadilla cooks flat instead of ballooning in the center.

Flip Only After the First Side Sets

Cook until the underside is deep golden and the cheese has started to melt around the edges, then fold or cap the quesadilla and press gently. If you flip too early, the filling shifts and spills; if you wait too long, the tortilla gets too rigid and cracks. You want a clean release from the griddle and a soft, melting center when you cut into it.

Finish With Hot Honey and a Quick Rest

Drizzle the remaining hot honey over the quesadillas right after they come off the griddle, then cut them into wedges. Give them a minute before slicing so the cheese settles slightly and doesn’t run out in a rush. That tiny rest is what keeps the layers visible in the cross-section instead of sliding into a pile.

How to Adapt These Quesadillas for Different Eaters

Make Them Milder

Use regular honey instead of hot honey in the filling and save a tiny drizzle of spiced honey for the people who want heat at the table. You keep the sweet-savory balance without making the whole batch spicy.

Make Them Gluten-Free

Swap in sturdy gluten-free flour tortillas that are meant for folding and griddling. Some brands tear more easily than standard tortillas, so keep the filling in a tighter layer and flip with a wide spatula.

Make Them Meatless

Swap the chicken for finely chopped sautéed mushrooms or seasoned jackfruit and reduce the BBQ sauce slightly so the filling doesn’t turn wet. You’ll lose the chew of chicken, but the smoky-sweet sauce and melty cheese still carry the dish.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The tortillas soften a bit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: Freeze only if you’re okay with a softer tortilla after reheating. Wrap individual wedges tightly and freeze for up to 2 months.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a skillet or on a griddle over medium-low heat until the cheese melts again and the tortilla re-crisps. The microwave warms the filling fast, but it also makes the tortilla chewy and limp.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use leftover grilled chicken for these quesadillas?+

Yes, and it works especially well if the chicken already has a little char on it. Just shred it finely and toss it with the BBQ sauce and hot honey so the filling stays moist and evenly coated.

How do I keep the quesadillas from falling apart on the griddle?+

Use enough cheese on both sides of the filling so it melts into a seal, and don’t overload the tortillas. If the filling is piled too high, the top slides before the cheese has a chance to bind everything together.

Can I make these quesadillas ahead of time?+

You can mix the chicken filling a day ahead and keep it in the fridge. I’d griddle the tortillas just before serving, because the crisp shell is what makes this recipe worth serving fresh.

How do I stop the tortillas from burning before the cheese melts?+

Keep the griddle at medium heat and give the cheese time to soften before you press too hard or move the quesadilla. If the surface is smoking hot, the tortilla browns too fast and the filling never catches up.

Can I use a different cheese if I don’t have Monterey Jack?+

Yes, but pick a cheese that melts smoothly, like mozzarella or a mild pepper jack. Harder cheeses can taste good, but they don’t give you that gooey center that makes the quesadilla hold together.

Blackstone Hot Honey BBQ Chicken Quesadillas

Blackstone hot honey BBQ chicken quesadillas with melty cheddar and Monterey Jack, stuffed with saucy shredded chicken and red onion. Crisp golden tortillas are finished with a spicy-sweet hot honey drizzle and cut into shareable wedges.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mexican-American Fusion
Calories: 760

Ingredients
  

Blackstone hot honey BBQ chicken quesadillas
  • 2 cup cooked chicken shredded
  • 0.5 cup BBQ sauce
  • 2 tbsp hot honey or honey with hot sauce
  • 8 flour tortillas large
  • 3 cup shredded cheese cheddar and monterey jack
  • 0.25 red onion diced
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 1 sour cream for dipping
  • 1 ranch for dipping
  • 1 fresh cilantro for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet
  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Mix the BBQ chicken
  1. In a mixing bowl, toss shredded chicken with BBQ sauce and half the hot honey until evenly coated.
  2. Set the chicken aside while you prep the griddle and assemble the quesadillas.
Griddle and assemble
  1. Heat a Blackstone griddle to medium heat and butter the surface.
  2. Place 4 tortillas on the griddle and sprinkle each with cheese, leaving a thin edge around the perimeter.
  3. Add the BBQ chicken and diced red onion over the first layer, then top with more cheese to help it bind.
  4. Cover with the remaining tortillas and press down gently to seal the quesadillas.
Cook, finish, and serve
  1. Cook the quesadillas for 3-4 minutes per side, until deeply golden and the cheese is fully melted.
  2. Remove from the griddle, drizzle with the remaining hot honey, then cut into wedges and serve with sour cream, ranch, and fresh cilantro.

Notes

Pro tip: let the assembled quesadilla rest 1 minute off the griddle before cutting so the melted cheese sets and the wedges hold together. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; reheat on a hot griddle until warmed and crisp at the edges. Freezing is not recommended because tortillas can soften after thawing. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat cheese and swap sour cream for plain Greek yogurt.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating