Juicy chicken, a sticky-spicy glaze, and just enough char on the edges make these bang bang chicken skewers the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The sauce clings to the meat instead of sliding off, and the skewers stay tender thanks to a quick marinade and a short, hot grill. You get smoke, heat, sweetness, and a little tang in every bite.
What makes this version work is the balance in the sauce and the timing on the grill. Mayo gives the glaze body, sweet chili sauce brings sweetness and a little garlic, sriracha adds heat, and honey helps it caramelize without burning too quickly. The chicken gets seasoned before it ever hits the skewers, which means the flavor starts all the way through instead of sitting only on the surface.
Below, I’ve included the small things that matter here: why the sauce goes on near the end, how to keep the chicken from drying out, and the easiest swaps if you want to adjust the heat or make it gluten-free.
The sauce thickened up beautifully on the grill and the chicken stayed juicy even after the second brush-on. My husband kept sneaking pieces off the platter before I could get them to the table.
Bang Bang Chicken Skewers turn out best when the sauce gets brushed on at the end, and this version keeps that glossy, sticky finish without burning.
The Reason the Glaze Stays Sticky Instead of Slipping Off
The big mistake with sauced chicken skewers is putting on the glaze too early. Mayo-based sauces can scorch over direct heat, and thin sauces tend to melt off before they have a chance to set. Here, the chicken grills first, then gets brushed during the last couple of minutes so the heat can tighten the sauce into a glossy coating instead of turning it into a greasy puddle.
Another detail that matters is the size of the chicken cubes. Keep them close to 1.5 inches so they cook through at the same rate and still have enough surface area to char. If the pieces are too small, they dry out before the glaze finishes; if they’re too large, the outside overcooks while the center lags behind.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Skewers

- Chicken breast — Lean breast meat cooks fast on skewers and takes on the sauce cleanly. If you want richer results, boneless thighs work too, but they’ll need a little extra time on the grill and won’t slice quite as neatly on the platter.
- Olive oil — This helps the seasonings coat the chicken and gives the surface a little insurance against sticking. You don’t need a fancy oil here; the grill and the sauce carry the flavor.
- Mayonnaise — Mayo is what gives the bang bang sauce its body. It looks simple in the bowl, but it’s the reason the glaze clings instead of running off the skewers.
- Sweet chili sauce — This is the backbone of the sweet-savory flavor and the little bit of body in the sauce. Don’t swap in plain hot sauce; you’d lose the thickness and the gentle sweetness that makes bang bang sauce recognizable.
- Sriracha — This brings the heat. Start with the listed amount and push it up only if you know you like the sauce with a stronger kick.
- Honey and lime juice — Honey helps the glaze brown and stay shiny, while lime wakes up the richness in the mayo. The lime matters more than it looks on paper; it keeps the sauce from feeling heavy.
- Sesame seeds and green onions — These are finishing ingredients, not decoration. The seeds add a little nutty crunch, and the green onion gives a fresh bite that cuts through the sauce.
- Soaked wooden skewers — If you’re using wood, soak them for the full 30 minutes so they don’t scorch before the chicken is done. Metal skewers work too and skip that step entirely.
How to Grill Them Without Drying Out the Chicken
Seasoning the Chicken First
Toss the chicken with oil, salt, pepper, and garlic powder before threading it onto the skewers. That light coating keeps the cubes from tasting flat and helps the surface brown once they hit the heat. If the chicken seems wet after marinating, let the excess drip off before skewering so the grill can sear instead of steaming the meat.
Threading for Even Cooking
Pack the cubes on with just a little space between pieces. Crowding them traps steam, and that’s how you end up with pale chicken instead of those charred edges you’re after. If some pieces are thicker than others, put them toward the outside of the skewer where the heat is a little gentler.
Mixing the Sauce Until It’s Smooth
Whisk the sauce until the honey disappears and the color turns even and pale orange. If you see streaks of mayo or little pools of honey, it needs another few turns with the whisk. A smooth sauce brushes on more evenly and won’t leave a slick, separated layer on the chicken.
Finishing Over the Heat
Grill the skewers over medium-high heat for about 5 to 6 minutes per side, turning once the first side has good grill marks and the chicken releases easily. Brush on the sauce during the final 2 minutes so it can caramelize without burning. If the glaze starts to darken too fast, move the skewers to a cooler part of the grill and let the residual heat finish the job.
How to Adapt These Skewers for Different Heat Levels and Diets
Make It Milder Without Losing the Bang Bang Character
Cut the sriracha back to 1 tablespoon and add a little more sweet chili sauce if you want the sauce to lean sweeter than hot. The result is still creamy and punchy, just with a gentler finish that works better for mixed crowds.
Use Chicken Thighs for a Juicier Bite
Boneless thighs stay tender a little longer on the grill and handle extra sauce well. They do take a few more minutes to cook through, but the payoff is a richer, less lean texture that stands up nicely to the glaze.
Make It Gluten-Free
Use a certified gluten-free sweet chili sauce and check your sriracha label, since brands vary. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten-free, so this is an easy swap without changing the texture of the sauce.
Turn Them Into an Appetizer Spread
Serve the skewers whole with extra sauce for dipping, or slide the chicken off and pile it over rice for a more casual plate. The sauce works either way, but keeping the skewers intact makes them easier to pass around at parties and keeps the presentation sharp.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked chicken and extra sauce separately for up to 3 days. The chicken stays juicy, but the glaze thickens as it chills.
- Freezer: The cooked chicken freezes well for up to 2 months, though the sauce texture changes a bit after thawing. Freeze the chicken plain if you know you’ll want the cleanest finish later, then make fresh sauce when you reheat.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a 300°F oven or in a covered skillet over low heat. High heat dries out the breast meat fast, so reheat just until hot, then brush with a little fresh sauce at the end.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Bang Bang Chicken Skewers
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Mix olive oil, salt, black pepper, and garlic powder, then toss with the chicken cubes until evenly coated and glossy. Cover and marinate for 30 minutes.
- Thread the marinated chicken onto the soaked wooden skewers, spacing the pieces so they grill evenly. Keep the skewers level as you load them.
- Whisk together mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, honey, and lime juice until smooth and creamy. Taste and adjust if you want it hotter or sweeter.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat, then place the skewers on the grate and grill for 5–6 minutes per side until cooked through. Let them develop light char at the edges.
- Brush the skewers generously with bang bang sauce during the final 2 minutes of grilling so it turns glossy. Watch for bubbling at the surface.
- Serve immediately with extra sauce for dipping, topping the skewers with sesame seeds and green onions. Finish with lime wedges on the side so each skewer can be brightened before eating.


