Smoky BBQ chicken, melted cheddar-jack, and a sticky hot honey finish turn these Blackstone quesadillas into the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The tortillas get crisp and deeply golden on the griddle while the filling stays saucy and just a little messy in the best way. Every wedge gives you that pull of cheese, a hit of sweetness, and enough heat to keep the whole thing from tasting flat.
What makes this version work is balance. The chicken gets tossed with BBQ sauce and some of the hot honey before it ever hits the tortilla, so the filling tastes seasoned all the way through instead of relying on a drizzle at the end. Using a mix of cheddar and Monterey Jack helps with both flavor and melt, while the red onion cuts through the richness with a sharp bite. On the griddle, butter gives the tortillas color and crunch without making them greasy.
Below, I’ll walk through the one griddle trick that keeps the cheese from spilling out, the ingredient swaps that still hold up, and the best way to reheat leftovers without losing that crisp edge.
The tortillas got perfectly crisp on the Blackstone, and the hot honey at the end pulled the whole thing together. The cheese stayed melted without leaking everywhere, which never happens for me on the griddle.
Save these Blackstone Hot Honey BBQ Chicken Quesadillas for a crisp, cheesy griddle dinner with sticky sweet heat in every wedge.
How to Keep the Filling from Leaking on the Griddle
The mistake most people make with griddle quesadillas is overfilling them and turning the whole thing into a cheese escape plan. You need enough filling for a generous bite, not a mound that fights the tortilla seam. The cheese belongs both under and over the chicken, because that top layer acts like glue once it starts melting.
Let the griddle work at medium heat, not high. High heat browns the tortilla before the cheese softens, which leaves you with a crisp shell and a cold center. Medium heat gives the tortillas time to turn golden while the cheese melts into the chicken and onions, and the gentle press helps everything seal without squeezing the filling out the sides.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

- Cooked shredded chicken — This is the backbone of the filling, and shredded chicken picks up the BBQ sauce better than chunks. Rotisserie chicken works well here because it’s already seasoned and tender, which matters when the rest of the dish cooks fast.
- BBQ sauce — Use a sauce you actually like, because it sets the base flavor. A thicker sauce clings to the chicken better and keeps the quesadillas from getting watery.
- Hot honey — This is what gives the quesadillas their signature sweet heat. If you don’t have it, mix honey with a few dashes of hot sauce; it won’t taste exactly the same, but it gives you that sticky finish and a little bite.
- Cheddar and Monterey Jack — Cheddar brings the flavor, Monterey Jack brings the melt. A pre-shredded bag works in a pinch, but freshly shredded cheese melts smoother and helps the quesadilla hold together.
- Flour tortillas — Large flour tortillas are the right choice because they crisp up without cracking. Smaller tortillas make the filling harder to spread evenly, and corn tortillas won’t give you the same foldable texture.
- Red onion — The raw bite keeps the filling from tasting heavy. Dice it small so it softens a little on the griddle instead of staying harsh and crunchy.
- Butter — Butter on the griddle gives the tortillas better color and a richer finish than plain oil. Don’t use too much or the quesadillas will fry instead of toast.
Building the Sweet Heat Layer by Layer
Coating the Chicken First
Toss the shredded chicken with the BBQ sauce and half the hot honey before it goes anywhere near the griddle. That first coating matters because it seasons the meat itself and keeps every bite from tasting dry. If the chicken looks overly glossy or loose, stop adding sauce; you want it coated, not pooled.
Getting the Tortillas Golden
Butter the griddle, then lay down the tortillas and let them start warming before the filling goes on. The side that touches the griddle should pick up color first, while the inside side stays flexible enough to fold without tearing. If the heat is too high, the tortillas will brown in patches before the cheese is ready, so keep the burner steady and watch for even sizzling.
Melting the Cheese at the Right Time
Sprinkle cheese under the chicken and again on top before adding the second tortilla. That top layer is the part people skip, and it’s the reason their quesadillas fall apart. Press down gently with a spatula once they’re assembled, then cook until the underside is deeply golden and the cheese has melted enough to hold the filling in one piece.
Finishing with the Drizzle
Pull the quesadillas off the griddle, then drizzle the remaining hot honey over the top right before slicing. If you add it too early, the honey can burn or disappear into the tortilla. The final drizzle stays bright and sticky, and it hits harder once the wedges are cut and the cheese is still pulling apart inside.
Three Ways to Change the Flavor Without Losing the Crunch
Make it dairy-free
Use a good melting dairy-free cheese and cook a little lower and slower than usual. You won’t get the same stretch as Monterey Jack, but you’ll still get a crisp tortilla and a hot, saucy filling if you don’t rush the melt.
Swap in leftover pulled pork
Pulled pork works well with the same BBQ and hot honey finish, and it brings a richer, smokier bite. Keep the filling a little lighter than the chicken version because pork can be denser and easier to overstuff.
Turn up the heat without changing the method
Add sliced jalapeños or a pinch of chipotle powder to the chicken mixture if you want a deeper, smokier heat. That keeps the sweet-hot balance intact while making the filling taste a little bolder and less barbecue-sweet.
Make it gluten-free
Use certified gluten-free tortillas and check the BBQ sauce label, since some brands hide gluten in the ingredient list. The method stays the same, but gluten-free tortillas usually need gentler flipping because they crack more easily than standard flour tortillas.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The tortillas soften a bit as they sit, but the filling still reheats well.
- Freezer: These freeze okay if you wrap the wedges tightly and separate layers with parchment. Thaw in the fridge before reheating for the best texture.
- Reheating: Reheat in a dry skillet or on the griddle over medium-low heat until the outside crisps back up and the center is hot. The biggest mistake is using the microwave first, which makes the tortilla soggy and the cheese rubbery.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Blackstone Hot Honey BBQ Chicken Quesadillas
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- In a bowl, toss the shredded cooked chicken with the BBQ sauce and half of the hot honey until evenly coated, with no dry chicken showing.
- Set the chicken mixture aside while you heat the griddle.
- Heat the Blackstone griddle to medium heat and brush or rub the surface with butter so it shimmers but doesn’t burn.
- Place 4 tortillas on the griddle and sprinkle cheese over each tortilla edge to edge to create a melting layer.
- Add the BBQ chicken and diced red onion in an even layer over the cheese.
- Top with more cheese and remaining tortillas, then press down gently so the tortillas adhere and the filling stays contained.
- Cook for 3-4 minutes per side, flipping once, until both sides are golden and the cheese is fully melted and stretchy.
- Remove the quesadillas from the griddle and drizzle with the remaining hot honey while still hot.
- Cut into wedges and serve immediately with sour cream, ranch, and fresh cilantro for garnish.