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Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs
Home Dinner Recipes Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs
Dinner Recipes

Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs

Prep Time 25 min
Cook Time 10 min
Servings 6

Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs

These grilled garlic butter steak and shrimp kabobs land with the kind of sizzle that gets people moving toward the grill before you even call them to the table. The steak picks up a deep savory crust, the shrimp stay plump and tender, and the vegetables catch just enough char to balance the richness of the butter. Every bite gives you a little of everything: smoke, garlic, lemon, and that glossy finish that makes kabobs feel a little special without asking for much more than a hot grill.

The trick is keeping the garlic butter divided from the start. Half goes on as a quick marinade to season the steak and shrimp, and the other half stays clean for basting at the end, which keeps the finished kabobs bright instead of muddy. I also like to cut the steak into even pieces and thread the shrimp snugly, so everything cooks at the same pace and nothing dries out while you’re waiting for the rest of the skewer to catch up.

Below, I’ll walk through the small choices that matter here: which steak cuts hold up best, why shrimp should be peeled before grilling, and how to keep the butter from turning the whole thing greasy. The process is straightforward, but a few details make the difference between good kabobs and the kind people ask you to bring again.

The garlic butter soaked into the steak just enough, and the shrimp stayed juicy instead of turning rubbery. I loved that the reserved butter brushed on at the end kept everything shiny and flavorful without burning on the grill.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save these grilled garlic butter steak and shrimp kabobs for the nights when you want surf and turf with smoky char and an easy garlic butter finish.

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The Best Part Is Saving Half the Garlic Butter

The easiest mistake with butter-based kabobs is using the same mixture for marinating and finishing. Once raw steak and shrimp have sat in that butter, it’s no longer the clean, bright sauce you want to brush on at the end. Splitting it in half solves that problem and gives you two jobs for one mixture: seasoning before grilling and glossing the kabobs after they come off the heat.

That second portion matters more than people think. Fresh butter, lemon juice, and parsley keep the final flavor lively, while the marinating half picks up enough savory depth from the seafood and beef to do its job without wasting anything. If your kabobs taste heavy, it’s usually because all the butter went on too early and cooked down on the grill instead of finishing the dish.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in These Kabobs

Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs steak shrimp garlic butter
  • Sirloin steak — Sirloin holds up well on skewers because it stays tender without falling apart. Cut it into even cubes so it reaches medium in the same window the shrimp turn opaque.
  • Large shrimp — Use large shrimp if you can. They’re easier to skewer and less likely to overcook before the steak is done. Peel them first so the garlic butter can coat the meat directly.
  • Butter — This carries the garlic, lemon, and herbs and gives the kabobs their finished shine. Real butter matters here; margarine won’t brown or taste the same, and the sauce won’t feel as rich.
  • Lemon juice — A little acid keeps the butter from tasting flat and helps the shrimp pop on the palate. Don’t overdo it or the marinade starts to taste sharp instead of balanced.
  • Bell peppers and onions — These add sweetness and a little char, which helps the kabobs feel complete. Cut them into pieces that are big enough to stay on the skewer and small enough to cook through in the same time as the meat.
  • Metal or wooden skewers — Metal skewers conduct heat and help the center pieces cook a little faster. If you’re using wooden skewers, soak them long enough that the exposed ends don’t scorch on the grill.

Getting the Grill Timing Right So the Shrimp Stay Tender

Mixing the Garlic Butter

Stir the melted butter, garlic, parsley, lemon juice, salt, and pepper until everything looks evenly suspended, not separated into streaks. The garlic should be fine enough to cling to the meat without falling straight into the grill grates. If the butter starts to firm up while you work, warm it just enough to loosen it again, but don’t let it get hot enough to cook the garlic.

Marinating Without Overdoing It

Coat the steak and shrimp in half the butter mixture and let them sit for 30 minutes. That’s enough time for flavor to settle in without the shrimp turning soft from the acid or the seafood picking up a mushy texture. If you leave it much longer, the lemon starts doing more damage than good and the shrimp can go slightly tough on the outside before they ever hit the grill.

Threading for Even Cooking

Alternate the steak, shrimp, peppers, and onions so each skewer has a mix of ingredients, but don’t cram everything tightly together. A little space helps the heat circulate and gives you more caramelization instead of steaming. If the pieces are packed too close, the vegetables go limp before the meat gets any color.

Grilling and Basting at the End

Grill over medium-high heat for 3 to 4 minutes per side, brushing with the reserved garlic butter as the kabobs cook. Watch for the shrimp to turn pink and opaque and for the steak to pick up good grill marks without going gray and dry in the center. The final baste should happen near the end, not at the beginning, or the butter can flare up and burn before the kabobs are done.

How to Adapt These Kabobs Without Losing What Makes Them Work

Dairy-Free Version

Swap the butter for a good olive oil or a plant-based butter that melts cleanly. You’ll lose some of the classic richness, but the garlic, lemon, and parsley still carry the dish, and the kabobs will still grill beautifully without the dairy.

Steak-Only Kabobs

If you want to skip the shrimp, use extra steak and add more onion and pepper so the skewers still feel balanced. The cook time stays close, but you’ll want to pull them when the steak reaches your preferred doneness instead of waiting for seafood cues.

Gluten-Free as Written

These kabobs are naturally gluten-free as long as your butter and seasonings are plain. This is one of those cases where the best move is not to change anything, just check that any pre-mixed seasoning or garlic butter shortcut hasn’t added fillers.

Make-Ahead Skewers for a Crowd

You can cut the steak, clean the shrimp, and mix the butter earlier in the day, then assemble everything just before grilling. Keep the meat cold until it’s time to skewer so the shrimp stay firm and the steak doesn’t sit in the marinade longer than intended.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The shrimp will lose a little of its just-grilled tenderness, so don’t expect the same texture the next day.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing cooked kabobs. The shrimp turns watery and the vegetables go soft when thawed.
  • Reheating: Warm them gently in a skillet over low heat with a small splash of water or extra butter, just until heated through. High heat will overcook the shrimp fast and make the steak tough.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen shrimp for these kabobs?+

Yes, as long as you thaw them completely and pat them dry before marinating. Extra surface moisture keeps the butter from clinging and can steam the shrimp instead of helping it brown. Dry shrimp also grill more evenly and stay snappier in texture.

How do I keep the shrimp from overcooking on the grill?+

Use large shrimp and don’t crowd the skewers. Shrimp cook fast, so the grill should be hot enough to give the steak color without leaving the seafood hanging on too long. Pull the kabobs as soon as the shrimp turn pink and opaque with a slight curl.

Can I marinate these kabobs overnight?+

I wouldn’t. The lemon in the butter is gentle for a short marinade, but overnight is long enough to change the shrimp’s texture and make the steak surface a little strange. Thirty minutes gives you flavor without risking that rubbery bite.

How do I know when the steak is done on kabobs?+

The best cue is the steak’s color and feel, not the clock alone. On kabobs, small cubes cook fast, so look for a browned exterior and a center that still has a little give when pressed. If you like medium-rare, pull them early, because carryover heat will finish the job while they rest for a minute or two.

Can I cook these in the oven instead of on the grill?+

Yes, under a hot broiler. Put the skewers on a lined sheet pan and keep them close to the heat source, turning once so both sides get color. You won’t get the same smoke, but the butter still works and the shrimp cooks quickly enough to stay tender.

Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs

Grilled garlic butter steak and shrimp kabobs with buttery minced garlic, grilled over medium-high heat until the steak is browned and the shrimp turn pink. Alternating steak, shrimp, and vegetables on skewers keeps every bite saucy with reserved garlic butter.
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
marinating 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 5 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 540

Ingredients
  

Steak and shrimp kabobs
  • 1 lb sirloin steak Cubed.
  • 1 lb large shrimp Peeled. Look for pink when cooked.
  • 1 bell peppers and onions Cut into chunks sized to skewer (amount as needed).
  • 1 wooden or metal skewers Soak wooden skewers in water 15-30 minutes if using to reduce burning.
Garlic butter
  • 6 tbsp butter Melted.
  • 4 garlic Minced.
  • 1 tbsp fresh parsley Chopped.
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice Fresh.
  • 1 salt and pepper To taste.

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make garlic butter
  1. In a bowl, mix melted butter, minced garlic, chopped parsley, lemon juice, salt, and pepper until evenly combined, then set the mixture aside.
Reserve for basting and marinate
  1. Reserve half of the garlic butter for basting and pour the remaining half into a dish with the cubed sirloin steak and peeled shrimp.
  2. Marinate the steak and shrimp for 30 minutes.
Skewer and grill
  1. Thread steak, shrimp, and bell peppers and onions alternately onto skewers, keeping pieces snug so they cook evenly.
  2. Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for 3 minutes per side, basting with the reserved garlic butter until browned on the steak.
  3. Grill another 1 to 4 minutes per side, basting as needed, until shrimp turn pink and opaque.
Serve
  1. Serve immediately while the garlic butter is hot and the skewers are visually blistered and saucy.

Notes

Pro tip: cut steak and vegetables into similar-sized chunks so they hit doneness at the same time as the shrimp. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container up to 3 days (reheat gently in a skillet to avoid rubbery shrimp); freezing is not recommended for best texture. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat butter or a butter alternative that still browns on the grill.
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