Sticky bourbon chicken skewers land on the plate with a glossy glaze that clings to every edge and caramelizes into those dark, bronzed spots that taste like the grill did something magical. The chicken stays juicy because the marinade does two jobs at once: it seasons the meat from the inside, then reduces into a sticky finish on the heat. You get sweet, savory, a little heat from the pepper flakes, and that warm bourbon note that makes the whole thing taste a little more special than standard grilled chicken.
The trick is in the balance. Brown sugar and honey create the stickiness, but soy sauce keeps the glaze from turning cloying, and the garlic-ginger base gives it backbone. I also like reserving part of the marinade for basting, because that extra layer builds shine on the grill without drowning the chicken. If you skip the soak on the skewers, they’ll scorch before the chicken finishes; if you rush the marinating time, the flavor won’t have a chance to settle in.
Below you’ll find the exact timing that keeps the glaze lacquered instead of burnt, plus a few smart swaps if you need to work around what’s in your pantry. I’ve also included the storage notes that make these skewers just as useful for lunch the next day as they are for a crowd.
The glaze thickened up beautifully on the grill and didn’t burn, which has happened to me with other bourbon chicken recipes. The chicken stayed tender and the sesame seed finish made it feel restaurant-worthy.
Sticky bourbon chicken skewers with that glossy brown sugar glaze are the kind of grilled dinner worth pinning for backyard cookouts and easy party nights.
The Grilling Mistake That Turns Bourbon Chicken Bitter
The biggest problem with bourbon chicken on skewers is heat that’s too aggressive. Bourbon, brown sugar, and honey all brown fast, and once that glaze goes from caramelized to scorched, the whole batch tastes sharp instead of sticky and round. Medium-high heat is enough here, but the grill has to be hot, not blazing. That gives the chicken color while the sugars build a lacquer instead of a burnt shell.
Another common failure is basting too early and too often. The reserved marinade should be brushed on during the last few minutes, when the chicken has already started cooking through and the surface can handle the extra sugar. If you load it up from the start, the glaze can drip and burn before the meat is done. Let the chicken pick up a bit of color first, then build the shine in layers.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Skewers

- Chicken breasts — Chicken breast keeps the recipe lean and cooks quickly on skewers. Cut the pieces evenly so they finish at the same time; uneven chunks are the fastest way to get dry edges and undercooked centers. If you want a little more forgiveness on the grill, boneless thighs work too and stay juicier.
- Bourbon — This adds depth, not just sweetness. You don’t need a top-shelf bottle, but use a bourbon you’d actually drink, because the flavor concentrates as the glaze cooks. If you’d rather skip alcohol, apple juice gives body, though you’ll lose that warm edge.
- Soy sauce, brown sugar, and honey — This is the core of the sticky glaze. Soy sauce brings salt and umami, brown sugar gives the caramel note, and honey helps the coating cling and shine. If you reduce the sugar too much, the glaze turns thin and won’t lacquer the chicken the same way.
- Garlic, ginger, and red pepper flakes — These keep the sweet glaze from tasting flat. Fresh ginger is worth using here because dried ginger won’t give the same bright snap. The pepper flakes stay gentle at this amount, but they keep the finish lively.
- Soaked wooden skewers — Don’t skip the soak. Dry skewers can char before the chicken finishes, especially once the marinade starts dripping and caramelizing. A 20- to 30-minute soak is enough.
Building the Glaze Before the Chicken Hits the Grill
Mix the Marinade with the End Result in Mind
Whisk the bourbon, soy sauce, brown sugar, honey, garlic, ginger, and red pepper flakes until the sugar starts dissolving. The mixture won’t look thick yet, and that’s fine; the goal here is seasoning and a base that will cook down later. Reserve part of the marinade before the chicken goes in, because once it touches raw chicken it’s no longer safe to brush on raw. That small step is what keeps the final glaze both flavorful and safe.
Let the Chicken Take the Flavor
Marinate the chicken for at least an hour, or up to four if you want a deeper bourbon note. The pieces should look slightly darker and glossy when they come out of the bowl. If you go much longer than four hours, the soy and sugar can start to change the texture at the surface, especially with chicken breast. Stir once or twice while it sits so every piece gets coated evenly.
Thread for Even Cooking
Pierce the chicken pieces through the center and keep the chunks close in size so they grill at the same rate. Leave a little space between pieces if you can; packed-tight skewers steam instead of sear. If the skewers are overloaded, the middles stay pale while the outside overcooks, so aim for a neat line rather than a crowded stack.
Grill, Baste, and Stop at the Shine
Cook the skewers over medium-high heat for about 5 to 6 minutes per side, turning once and basting with the reserved marinade near the end. You’re looking for light char marks, bubbling glaze, and chicken that feels firm but not hard when pressed. If the glaze starts to smoke heavily, move the skewers to a cooler spot on the grill. Pull them as soon as the juices run clear and the thickest piece reads done; carryover heat will finish the job while the glaze settles into a sticky finish.
How to Adapt the Skewers Without Losing the Sticky Finish
Make it gluten-free with tamari
Swap the soy sauce for tamari in a 1:1 amount. The glaze keeps the same salty-sweet balance, and you won’t lose the color or the sheen. Use a gluten-free tamari you like the taste of, since that flavor concentrates as it cooks.
Use chicken thighs for a juicier bite
Boneless, skinless thighs work beautifully here and are a little harder to dry out on the grill. They take on the glaze well and stay tender even if the heat runs a touch high. Expect a richer, more forgiving result with slightly less lean texture than breast meat.
Skip the bourbon for a family-friendly version
Replace the bourbon with apple juice or chicken broth. Apple juice keeps the sweet note closest to the original, while broth softens the sweetness and gives a more savory glaze. You won’t get the same warm depth, but the skewers still caramelize nicely.
Turn them into a party appetizer
Use smaller chicken pieces and shorter skewers so guests can pick them up easily. Grill them a minute or two less if the pieces are bite-sized, then brush on the glaze at the end for maximum shine. You’ll lose a little of the dramatic dinner-plate look, but you gain easy serving.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The glaze firms up as it chills, but the flavor stays strong.
- Freezer: Freeze cooked chicken off the skewers for up to 2 months. Thaw in the fridge before reheating so the glaze doesn’t split from temperature shock.
- Reheating: Warm in a 300°F oven, covered loosely with foil, until heated through. Microwaving works in a pinch, but it can make the chicken rubbery and the glaze tacky in the wrong way.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Sticky Bourbon Chicken Skewers
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk bourbon, soy sauce, brown sugar, honey, garlic, ginger, and red pepper flakes until smooth and combined, with no visible sugar lumps.
- Reserve 1/4 cup marinade for basting, then keep it covered so it’s ready for grilling.
- Add chicken chunks to the remaining marinade and toss to coat thoroughly, then cover and marinate for 1-4 hours (up to 1 hour minimum) in the refrigerator.
- Let the marinated chicken sit at room temperature for 10 minutes before skewering so the marinade clings better.
- Thread chicken onto soaked wooden skewers, placing chunks snugly so they caramelize evenly.
- Grill over medium-high heat for 5-6 minutes per side, brushing with the reserved marinade during grilling so the surface turns glossy and sticky.
- Garnish the hot skewers with sesame seeds and green onions before serving, so they stay fresh and bright.