Bang bang chicken skewers hit that sweet spot between charred, juicy chicken and a sauce that clings in all the right places. The grill gives the outside a little edge, the center stays tender, and the creamy spicy drizzle pulls the whole thing together without drowning the meat.
What makes this version work is the balance: the chicken gets a short marinade with just enough oil, salt, and pepper to help it brown, while the sauce stays sharp from sweet chili, sriracha, and a little rice vinegar. That vinegar matters. It keeps the mayo from tasting flat and cuts through the richness so every bite stays lively.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep the skewers from drying out, the sauce from going one-note, and the grill marks from turning into a charred mess. If you’ve had bang bang chicken that tasted all heat and no contrast, this version fixes that.
The chicken stayed juicy on the grill and the sauce thickened up just enough to coat everything without sliding right off. My husband kept picking at the skewers before dinner was even on the table.
Save these bang bang chicken skewers for the nights when you want grilled chicken with a creamy sweet-heat sauce that actually sticks.
The Trick to Keeping These Skewers Juicy on a Hot Grill
Chicken breast dries out fast when it sits over direct heat too long, and skewers make that mistake easier to spot because the meat is cut small. The fix here is simple: cut the pieces evenly, keep the grill at medium-high instead of screaming hot, and pull the skewers as soon as the centers hit 165°F. If some pieces are much smaller than others, the thin ones will overcook before the thicker chunks are done.
Soaking the wooden skewers matters too, but not because it magically prevents every hint of browning. It keeps them from burning through before the chicken finishes. The other thing worth respecting is the resting time after marinating. Even 30 minutes gives the seasoning a head start without softening the chicken so much that it turns mushy on the grill.
- Chicken breasts — Breasts stay lean and hold onto the bang bang sauce well, but they need even cutting. If you want a little more forgiveness, boneless thighs work too and stay juicier over the grill.
- Olive oil — This helps the seasoning coat the chicken and encourages browning. A neutral oil also works; the oil’s job here is texture and heat protection, not flavor.
- Wooden skewers — Soak them for at least 20 to 30 minutes so they don’t scorch before the chicken is cooked through. Metal skewers are a fine swap if that’s what you have.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Sauce
- Mayonnaise — This is the creamy base that carries the sauce. Use a good mayo because it’s the backbone of the whole thing, and if you swap it for something thinner, the sauce won’t cling to the chicken the same way.
- Sweet chili sauce — This gives the sauce sweetness, body, and those little bits of chile flavor that make bang bang sauce recognizable. There isn’t a perfect substitute, but a mix of honey, hot sauce, and a pinch of garlic can get you partway there.
- Sriracha — This brings the heat and a little garlic tang. Start with the full amount if you want the sauce to taste bold; if you know your crowd likes it milder, cut it back and add more at the end.
- Honey — A small amount rounds out the heat and helps the sauce glaze instead of tasting sharp. Maple syrup can stand in, though the flavor shifts slightly and reads a little deeper.
- Rice vinegar — This is the clean finish that keeps the sauce from feeling heavy. Lime juice can work in a pinch, but rice vinegar is smoother and less aggressive here.
Grill the Chicken First, Then Build the Sauce Around It
Seasoning and Skewering
Toss the chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper until every piece looks lightly coated. Thread the chunks onto the soaked skewers with a little space between them so heat can move around the meat. If you pack the pieces too tightly, the centers steam while the outside waits for color.
Getting the Grill Marks Without Drying the Meat
Lay the skewers over medium-high heat and leave them alone for the first few minutes so they pick up color. Turn them once the underside releases cleanly and shows browned edges, then cook the second side until the chicken is opaque all the way through. The biggest failure here is moving the skewers too often, which keeps them from browning and can make the exterior dry before the inside is done.
Whisking the Bang Bang Sauce
Stir the mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, honey, and rice vinegar together until smooth and glossy. If the sauce tastes flat, it’s usually because it needs either a little more vinegar or a little more salt from the chicken itself, not more sweetness. Mix it while the chicken grills so it’s ready the second the skewers come off the heat.
Finishing and Serving
Drizzle the sauce over the hot skewers or spoon it on just before serving so it stays creamy and bright. Finish with green onions and sesame seeds for color and a little crunch. If you sauce them too far ahead, the glaze softens the grilled exterior and you lose that nice contrast between char and creaminess.
How to Adapt These Skewers for Different Eaters and Different Nights
Dairy-Free Bang Bang Chicken
This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which makes it easy to serve to a mixed crowd without changing the texture. Just check the mayonnaise label if you use a store-bought brand, since most are fine but a few specialty versions add dairy ingredients.
Make It Milder Without Losing the Bang Bang Feel
Cut the sriracha to 1 tablespoon and keep the sweet chili sauce the same. You still get the creamy-sweet balance, but the heat stays in the background instead of taking over the bite.
Use Chicken Thighs for a More Forgiving Grill
Boneless skinless thighs hold up better if your grill runs hot or you’re juggling a few extra minutes. They take on a little more richness and stay juicier, though you lose the lean, clean bite of chicken breast.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked chicken and sauce separately for up to 3 days. The sauce may thicken in the fridge, and the chicken will lose a little of its fresh-off-the-grill snap.
- Freezer: The grilled chicken freezes well for up to 2 months, but the sauce doesn’t. Freeze the chicken in a tight container or bag, then make the sauce fresh when you reheat.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a 325°F oven or in a covered skillet over low heat so it doesn’t dry out. Microwaving works in a pinch, but it can make the edges rubbery fast, especially if you heat the sauced chicken instead of the plain skewers.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Bang Bang Chicken Skewers
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Cut chicken breasts into chunks, then toss with olive oil, salt, and pepper until evenly coated. Visual cue: chicken pieces should look lightly glossy with no dry spots.
- Thread the seasoned chicken onto soaked wooden skewers, spacing pieces so they cook through. Visual cue: all chunks should be snug but not overlapping.
- Let the skewers rest for 30 minutes in the refrigerator to marinate. Visual cue: chicken will look slightly firmer and the seasoning will cling more tightly.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat and place skewers on the grates. Visual cue: you should see immediate sizzle when skewers hit the heat.
- Grill for 5-6 minutes per side until cooked through. Visual cue: edges turn golden and the thickest piece is no longer pink.
- Whisk mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, honey, and rice vinegar until smooth. Visual cue: the sauce becomes creamy and white-orange in color.
- Drizzle bang bang sauce over the hot grilled skewers and garnish with green onions and sesame seeds. Visual cue: sauce streaks should look glossy and lightly sticky on the chicken.