Glassy, caramelized chicken kabobs with sticky honey-garlic edges and charred peppers are the kind of grill dinner that disappears fast. The chicken stays juicy because the marinade does more than add flavor; the honey helps the glaze cling, the soy brings salt and depth, and the sesame oil and ginger give the skewers that unmistakable takeout-style finish.
The trick with this recipe is keeping the marinade balanced enough to baste with without turning bitter on the grill. A portion gets reserved before the chicken goes in, which gives you a clean glaze for brushing later and keeps everything food-safe. Pineapple adds sweet acidity, but it also needs to be cut large enough to stay on the skewer and hold its shape over the heat.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: how to get glossy kabobs without drying out the chicken or burning the honey before the center is cooked. There are also a few smart swaps and storage notes if you want to serve these with rice, noodles, or straight off the grill.
The glaze got sticky and caramelized on the grill instead of sliding off, and the pineapple picked up just enough char to balance the honey. I reserved extra marinade like the directions said, and the kabobs came off juicy, not dry.
Save these honey garlic Asian chicken kabobs for the nights when you want sticky grilled skewers with glossy glaze and barely any cleanup.
The Marinade Needs a Reserve Bowl, Not a Generous Guess
The easiest way to ruin kabobs like these is to use the same marinade for basting that you used for raw chicken. It’s a food safety problem, but it also muddies the final glaze. Reserving a clean portion before the chicken goes in gives you a glossy, concentrated brush-on sauce that caramelizes instead of steaming.
The other thing that matters here is timing. Honey makes the chicken brown fast, which is great until it starts to blacken before the meat is cooked through. Medium-high heat is the sweet spot, and the skewers need a little breathing room on the grill so the glaze can set instead of dripping off into flare-ups.
What the Honey, Soy, and Pineapple Are Each Doing Here

- Honey — This is what gives the kabobs that sticky, lacquered finish. You need real honey here, not a substitute syrup, because it caramelizes and clings to the chicken as it grills.
- Soy sauce — This does the salty heavy lifting and gives the glaze its deeper color. Use low-sodium soy if that’s what you keep on hand; it’s easier to season up than to rescue an overly salty marinade.
- Rice vinegar — A small amount keeps the glaze from tasting flat and helps the honey read as bright instead of cloying. If you don’t have it, apple cider vinegar works in a pinch, but use a lighter hand because it’s sharper.
- Sesame oil — You only need a tablespoon, but it brings the whole marinade into that Asian-fusion lane immediately. Don’t swap in a neutral oil unless you’re fine losing that nutty finish.
- Fresh ginger and garlic — These are worth using fresh, not powdered. They perfume the marinade and keep the flavor from tasting one-note after grilling.
- Pineapple — This adds sweetness and a little acidity, and it holds up better than softer fruit. Cut the chunks large enough that they stay on the skewer and don’t collapse over the flames.
Building the Glaze So It Stays Sticky on the Grill
Whisk the marinade until the honey disappears
The honey needs to be fully dissolved into the soy, vinegar, sesame oil, garlic, and ginger before the chicken goes in. If you still see thick streaks of honey, those spots won’t coat the meat evenly and the basting sauce can turn unevenly dark on the grill. Whisk until the mixture looks glossy and smooth.
Marinate long enough to season, not long enough to soften
One hour is enough to season the chicken well, and up to four hours gives you a deeper soy-garlic finish. Go much longer and the vinegar starts to change the texture, especially with breast meat. Keep the bowl covered in the fridge while it rests.
Thread the skewers with balance in mind
Alternate chicken, peppers, onions, and pineapple so the heat hits different surfaces and everything cooks evenly. Don’t pack the pieces tightly; air gaps help the chicken cook through before the glaze burns. If your vegetables are cut too small, they’ll overcook before the chicken is done, so keep the chunks hearty.
Grill hot, then baste near the end
Lay the kabobs over medium-high heat and leave them alone long enough to pick up those grill marks. Baste during the last few minutes, not at the start, or the honey will scorch before the chicken finishes. The chicken is done when it’s opaque all the way through and the juices run clear at the thickest piece.
Use thighs for a juicier kabob
Chicken thighs stay more forgiving on the grill and handle a little extra char better than breasts. The flavor lands a touch richer, and the texture stays tender even if you leave them on a minute too long.
Make it gluten-free with tamari
Swap the soy sauce for gluten-free tamari in a straight one-to-one exchange. You’ll keep the same salty depth and caramelization, so the kabobs still taste like the original.
Skip the pineapple and go savory
If you want a less sweet skewer, replace the pineapple with extra bell pepper and red onion. The kabobs will still caramelize beautifully, but the glaze will read more teriyaki-style and less tropical.
Broil them when grilling isn’t an option
Set the kabobs on a foil-lined sheet pan and broil them a few inches from the heat, turning once. The glaze will still bubble and darken, though you’ll lose the smoky grill flavor and a little of that open-fire char.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The vegetables soften a bit, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: The cooked chicken freezes fine for up to 2 months, but the peppers and onions lose some texture. If you want the best result, freeze the chicken separately and add fresh vegetables when reheating.
- Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 325°F oven until warmed through. High heat dries out the chicken and makes the honey glaze tacky in the wrong way.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Honey Garlic Asian Chicken Kabobs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk together honey, soy sauce, garlic, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and ginger until smooth. The mixture should look glossy and evenly combined.
- Reserve 1/4 cup marinade for basting in a separate container. Set it aside for later grilling.
- Marinate the chicken for 1-4 hours, covered in the refrigerator. The chicken should turn slightly darker as it absorbs the sweet soy flavors.
- Thread chicken, bell peppers and onions, and pineapple chunks onto soaked wooden skewers. Leave small gaps between pieces so they char evenly.
- Grill over medium-high heat for 5-6 minutes per side, basting with the reserved marinade as you cook. Look for grill marks and a caramelized, glossy glaze on the chicken.
- Garnish the kabobs with sesame seeds and green onions right before serving. Finish with the visible glaze for the best presentation.


