Bang Bang Chicken Skewers land with the kind of contrast that keeps people coming back for seconds: smoky, charred edges on the chicken, a juicy center, and a creamy sauce that brings sweet heat without smothering the grill flavor. The skewers cook fast, the sauce comes together in minutes, and the whole dish feels a lot more polished than the short ingredient list suggests.
What makes this version work is the balance. The chicken gets a simple oil-and-seasoning coating so the grill can do its job, and the sauce leans on sweet chili for body, sriracha for heat, and a little honey and rice vinegar to keep the finish round instead of sharp. Marinating the chicken briefly helps the surface season well, but you don’t need an all-day soak here. The real payoff is in the final drizzle: enough sauce to coat, not enough to hide the char.
Below you’ll find the small details that matter most, from keeping the chicken juicy on skewers to getting the sauce to cling instead of running off the plate.
The sauce clung to the chicken instead of sliding off, and the grill gave the skewers those crisp edges I always miss when I bake them. My husband said they tasted like takeout in the best way.
Love these grilled Bang Bang Chicken Skewers? Save them to Pinterest for the nights when you want smoky chicken, creamy spicy sauce, and an easy main dish that looks like you worked harder than you did.
The Trick to Juicy Skewers Is More About Size Than Time
Chicken skewers dry out when the pieces are too large or too uneven. The outside starts overcooking before the center has a chance to catch up, and then people blame the grill when the real problem is the cut. Keep the chicken in even chunks so every piece hits the heat at the same pace.
There’s another detail that matters here: the sauce goes on after grilling, not before. Bang bang sauce has mayonnaise in it, which would burn on direct heat and turn oily instead of creamy. A lot of grilled chicken recipes get mushy because the sauce is added too early. Here, the chicken gets color first, then the sauce finishes the dish with a cold, glossy contrast.
- Even chicken pieces — Cut the breasts into similar-size chunks so they cook through at the same time. Big pieces tend to stay pale in the center while the smaller ones dry out.
- Soaked wooden skewers — They don’t need to be drenched for hours, but a proper soak helps them hold up on a hot grill and keeps the ends from scorching too fast.
- Direct grill heat — Medium-high heat gives you the charred edges you want without sitting the chicken over the fire long enough to lose moisture.
What the Sauce Is Doing Beyond Adding Heat

- Mayonnaise — This is the base that makes the sauce cling. Use a good full-fat mayo here; light versions can taste thin and separate more easily when mixed with the other ingredients.
- Sweet chili sauce — This brings body, sweetness, and a little garlic-ginger depth. There isn’t a perfect substitute for it, but in a pinch you can mix apricot preserves with a splash of rice vinegar and a little chili sauce for heat.
- Sriracha — This adds sharp heat and a little tang. Start with the amount listed, then taste; some brands are hotter than others, and the goal is a sauce that wakes up the chicken without burying it.
- Rice vinegar — Just a small amount keeps the sauce from tasting flat. Regular white vinegar can work, but it tastes harsher, so use less if that’s all you have.
From Grill Marks to Sauce Drizzle Without Losing the Juiciness
Seasoning the Chicken
Coat the chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper before it ever touches the skewers. The oil helps the seasoning spread and keeps the surface from sticking to the grill grates. If the chicken looks wet or slippery, blot it first; excess moisture on the surface slows browning and gives you steam instead of color.
Threading and Grilling
Slide the chicken pieces onto soaked skewers with a little space between each chunk so heat can move around them. Lay the skewers on a preheated medium-high grill and leave them alone long enough to get marks before turning. The most common mistake here is constant flipping, which keeps the chicken from developing the browned edges that make this dish taste like it came off a real flame.
Mixing the Bang Bang Sauce
Whisk the sauce ingredients in a bowl until smooth and glossy. Taste it before you spoon it over the chicken; if you want more sweetness, add a touch more honey, and if it needs more lift, add a few drops more vinegar. If the sauce seems too thick, loosen it with a teaspoon of water at a time so it drizzles instead of clumping.
Finishing the Plate
Let the cooked skewers rest for a couple of minutes, then drizzle the sauce over the top and finish with green onions and sesame seeds. Resting matters because it keeps the juices inside the chicken instead of spilling out the moment you cut in. If you sauce them while they’re still screaming hot, the mayo base can thin out too much and slide off the meat.
How to Adapt These Skewers for Different Kitchens and Different Eaters
Make It Dairy-Free Without Losing the Creamy Sauce
This recipe is already naturally dairy-free as written, so you don’t need to change the sauce for that. Just check your mayonnaise and sweet chili sauce labels, since a few brands add milk-based ingredients or shared-line warnings. The texture and flavor stay the same.
Use Chicken Thighs for a Richer, More Forgiving Skewer
Boneless skinless thighs can replace breasts one-for-one if you want more tenderness and a little more margin on the grill. They take a minute or two longer, but they stay juicier if you get distracted by the flames. The sauce tastes a touch richer against thigh meat.
Tone Down the Heat Without Losing the Bang Bang Identity
Cut the sriracha in half and add a little extra sweet chili sauce if you want a gentler version. That keeps the sauce sweet, creamy, and tangy instead of just spicy. Removing the sriracha entirely makes it taste more like a glaze than bang bang sauce.
Turn It Into a Gluten-Free Main Dish
This works well as long as your sweet chili sauce and sriracha are certified gluten-free, since those are the ingredients most likely to vary by brand. The chicken and sauce themselves don’t rely on wheat for texture, so the finished dish stays just as crisp and saucy. Serve it with rice or grilled vegetables for an easy gluten-free plate.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked chicken and sauce separately for up to 3 days. The chicken stays tender, but the sauce may thicken in the fridge.
- Freezer: The grilled chicken freezes well for up to 2 months. Freeze it without the sauce, since mayonnaise-based sauces tend to separate after thawing.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven until just hot. High heat dries out the breast meat fast, so don’t blast it in the microwave unless you don’t mind losing that grilled texture.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Bang Bang Chicken Skewers
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Rub the chicken chunks with olive oil, salt, and pepper to coat evenly, making sure all pieces are seasoned.
- Thread the seasoned chicken onto soaked wooden skewers, leaving small gaps between chunks for more even grilling.
- Let the skewers rest for 30 minutes to marinate at room temperature or covered in the refrigerator, so the seasoning clings to the chicken.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat, then grill the skewers for 5-6 minutes per side until cooked through and lightly charred on the edges.
- Whisk together mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, honey, and rice vinegar until smooth and creamy with a white-orange color.
- Drizzle the bang bang sauce over the hot grilled skewers and finish with green onions and sesame seeds for a bright, crunchy topping.


