Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs

Category: Dinner Recipes

Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs bring together smoky bacon, tender chicken, and a sticky-sweet glaze that turns glossy on the grill and clings to every bite. The bacon crisps at the edges while the chicken stays juicy inside, and that contrast is what makes these skewers disappear fast once they hit the table.

The trick is in how the glaze and the bacon work together. Bourbon adds depth, brown sugar helps the sauce caramelize, and Worcestershire gives the whole thing a savory backbone so it doesn’t taste flat or candy-sweet. Wrapping the chicken before it goes on the skewers also helps the bacon hold tight and baste the meat as it cooks.

Below you’ll find the timing that keeps the bacon from burning before the chicken cooks through, plus a few smart swaps if you want to add peppers, onions, or change up the glaze for a different crowd.

The bacon tightened up beautifully on the grill and the bourbon BBQ glaze got sticky without burning. I used peppers between the chicken pieces and the skewers came off looking like something from a cookout menu.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Keep these bourbon bacon BBQ chicken kebabs in mind for the next grill night when you want smoky, sticky skewers with almost no cleanup.

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The part that keeps the bacon crisp instead of soggy

The biggest mistake with bacon-wrapped kebabs is rushing the heat. If the grill is too hot, the bacon blackens before the chicken is done, and if it’s too low, the bacon turns limp and the glaze never tightens up. Medium heat gives you enough time to render the bacon while still building that lacquered finish on the outside.

Marinating the wrapped chicken instead of the bare meat does more than coat the surface. The bourbon BBQ mixture seeps into the bacon as it rests, which means every layer picks up flavor instead of just the outside. The one thing you don’t want is a marinade that is too thin, because it runs off the skewers and never really sticks.

  • Chicken breasts — Cut them into even chunks so they cook at the same speed. Uneven pieces leave you with dry edges and underdone centers, especially once the bacon goes on.
  • Bacon — Regular-cut bacon works best here. Thick-cut bacon takes longer to crisp and can overcook the chicken before it renders enough fat.
  • Bourbon — This adds warmth and depth, not a boozy bite. If you need to skip it, use apple juice with a splash of vanilla and a little extra Worcestershire for richness.
  • BBQ sauce — Use a sauce you already like on its own. A sweet sauce turns the glaze sticky and glossy; a smoky sauce pushes the kebabs more savory.
  • Brown sugar — This helps the glaze caramelize on the grill. If you leave it out, the sauce will still taste good, but it won’t cling the same way.
  • Bell peppers and onions — These are optional, but they break up the richness and give you extra char. Cut them into pieces that are close in size to the chicken so nothing lags behind on the skewer.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Recipe

Recipe preparation and cooking
  • Primary ingredient (the foundation) — This is the star of the dish and carries most of the flavor. Quality matters here more than anywhere else.
  • Salt and pepper (the seasonings that matter most) — These enhance all other flavors without masking them. Apply generously; underseasoned dishes taste flat.
  • Fat (butter, oil, or from the meat) — Fat carries flavors and keeps the dish from tasting dry. It’s also what makes food taste delicious and satisfying.
  • Acid (lemon, lime, vinegar, or tomato) — Acid brightens the dish and prevents it from tasting one-dimensional or heavy. It also helps balance rich flavors.
  • Aromatics (garlic, onion, ginger) — These add depth and complexity. They mellow and become sweet when cooked, different from their raw state.
  • Spices or herbs (the personality) — These give the dish its character and make it distinctive. Toast them to bloom their flavors or add fresh ones to finish.
  • Supporting ingredients (vegetables, proteins) — These add texture, nutrition, and complementary flavors. They should support the star ingredient, not compete with it.
  • Proper cooking technique (heat, time, stirring) — Even with great ingredients, technique determines the final result. Pay attention to temperature and timing.

How to build the skewers so the glaze works with you, not against you

Wrapping the chicken

Wrap each chicken chunk snugly with half a slice of bacon and tuck the end underneath so it stays put. You want the bacon touching as much of the chicken as possible, because that contact helps it stay in place while the fat renders. If the bacon spirals loosely, it shrinks away on the grill and the chicken dries out faster than you’d expect.

Mixing and resting the marinade

Stir the BBQ sauce, bourbon, brown sugar, and Worcestershire together until the sugar dissolves and the mixture looks smooth and shiny. That rest time matters because the glaze needs a little time to settle before it goes on the meat. If the sugar stays gritty, it tends to scorch in spots instead of caramelizing evenly.

Threading the skewers

Slide the bacon-wrapped chicken onto soaked wooden skewers, adding peppers and onions if you’re using them. Leave a little space between pieces so the heat can circulate; packed-tight skewers steam instead of brown. If you crowd the skewer, the bacon stays pale on the sides and the middle cooks unevenly.

Grilling and basting

Set the kebabs over medium heat and cook for 6 to 7 minutes per side, brushing on the marinade as they cook. The sauce should start to darken and get sticky, not turn black and bitter. Stop basting with the raw marinade during the last few minutes unless you’ve reserved a clean portion for finishing, since the glaze that touched raw chicken shouldn’t be brushed on after it’s no longer going to cook long enough to kill bacteria.

Knowing when they’re done

The chicken is ready when it reaches 165°F and the bacon has crisped at the edges with a little char in spots. Let the skewers rest for a few minutes before serving so the juices settle back into the meat. If you cut them too soon, the glaze runs off and the chicken loses the moisture you worked to keep in.

How to adapt these kebabs for different crowds

Dairy-free and gluten-free as written

These kebabs are naturally dairy-free, and they stay gluten-free if your BBQ sauce and Worcestershire sauce are certified gluten-free. The only place people get caught is the sauce bottle, since some brands sneak in wheat-based ingredients or malt vinegar.

Skip the bourbon and keep the depth

If you don’t want to cook with bourbon, replace it with apple juice plus a teaspoon of vanilla or a splash of maple syrup. You lose some of the oakiness, but the glaze still turns sticky and slightly mellow instead of sharp.

Use chicken thighs for a juicier bite

Boneless thighs give you a little more cushion on the grill and stay juicy even if the bacon browns a touch faster than planned. They take roughly the same time, but the texture ends up richer and less lean.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The bacon softens a little in the fridge, but the flavor stays strong.
  • Freezer: You can freeze the cooked chicken and bacon pieces, though the texture of the bacon gets a little less crisp after thawing. Freeze them off the skewers in a single layer first, then transfer to a bag or container.
  • Reheating: Warm them in a 350°F oven until hot through, or use a skillet over medium-low heat. The common mistake is microwaving them too hard, which makes the chicken rubbery and the bacon chewy instead of crisping back up.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make these kebabs in the oven?+

Yes. Bake them on a rack set over a sheet pan at 425°F so the bacon can render instead of steaming underneath the chicken. Broil for the last minute or two if you want more color, but watch closely because the glaze can go from sticky to burnt fast.

How do I keep the bacon from falling off the chicken?+

Wrap the bacon tightly and tuck the seam underneath before threading it onto the skewer. The skewer helps hold the bacon in place while it starts to render, which is why loose wraps slip and unwrap on the grill. If a piece looks loose, secure it with the skewer through the middle of the bacon seam.

Can I marinate these overnight?+

You can, but 1 to 4 hours is the sweet spot. The bourbon glaze is more about coating and caramelizing than deeply tenderizing, so a very long marinade doesn’t buy you much and can make the bacon a little softer before grilling. A few hours gives you the best balance of flavor and texture.

How do I know the chicken is done without drying it out?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and pull them as soon as the thickest piece hits 165°F. If you wait for the bacon to look perfect before checking the chicken, the meat usually goes past juicy. The thermometer is the only reliable way to catch that narrow window.

Can I use thick-cut bacon for these skewers?+

You can, but it takes longer to render and usually needs lower heat. Regular-cut bacon crisps in the same time the chicken cooks, which is why it works better here. Thick-cut bacon can leave you with a chewy wrap unless you pre-cook it slightly first.

Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs

Bourbon chicken kebabs with bacon wrapped chunks and a smoky sweet bourbon BBQ glaze. Grilled until the bacon is crisp and the chicken reaches 165°F for juicy, charred party food.
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
marinating 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 40 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 620

Ingredients
  

Chicken breasts
  • 2 lb chicken breasts cut into chunks
Bacon
  • 12 slices bacon cut in half
Bourbon BBQ glaze
  • 1 cup BBQ sauce use 1/2 cup
  • 1 cup bourbon use 1/4 cup
  • 1 cup brown sugar use 2 tablespoons
  • 1 cup Worcestershire sauce use 1 tablespoon
Skewers
  • 1 count wooden skewers soaked
Optional vegetables
  • 1 bell peppers and onions optional, to alternate on the skewers

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Wrap the chicken
  1. Wrap each chicken chunk with half a bacon slice and secure, creating a tight bacon layer around the meat.
Make bourbon BBQ marinade
  1. Mix BBQ sauce, bourbon, brown sugar, and Worcestershire sauce until the glaze looks smooth and glossy.
Marinate
  1. Marinate the wrapped chicken for 1-4 hours so the bacon and chicken pick up smoky sweet flavor.
Assemble kebabs
  1. Thread the marinated chicken onto skewers, alternating with bell peppers and onions if using, so each piece is evenly spaced for grilling.
Grill
  1. Grill over medium heat for 6-7 minutes per side, basting with marinade each time you flip, until the bacon starts to crisp and caramelize.
  2. Continue grilling until the bacon is crispy and the chicken reaches 165°F, then pull off the grill and rest briefly before serving.

Notes

Pro tip: If you want extra-busy sauce coverage, reserve a small portion of the bourbon BBQ mixture before marinating and use it for basting during grilling. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container for up to 3 days; reheat on a grill or skillet over medium heat until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended for best bacon texture. For a lower-fat swap, use turkey bacon instead of bacon and marinate as directed.

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