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Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs
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Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs

Prep Time 25 min
Cook Time 15 min
Servings 6

Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs

Bourbon bacon BBQ chicken kebabs hit the grill with all the things people usually hope for in one bite: smoky bacon, sticky glaze, and chicken that stays juicy instead of drying out while the bacon finishes. The bacon wrap does more than add flavor here. It helps baste the chicken as it cooks, and the bourbon BBQ glaze caramelizes on the outside into a glossy coating that clings instead of sliding off.

The trick is balancing two things at once: getting the bacon rendered enough to crisp at the edges without overcooking the chicken, and building a glaze that thickens as it hits the heat. A short marinade gives the meat flavor, but the real payoff comes from brushing on the sauce during grilling so it turns lacquered instead of burning early. If you’ve ever ended up with floppy bacon or dried-out chicken on skewers, this method fixes both problems.

Below, I’ve included the timing that keeps the bacon wrapped tight, the ingredient choices that matter most, and the little grilling cues that tell you when to pull the kebabs before the chicken goes over.

The bacon got crisp on the edges and the bourbon BBQ glaze thickened up beautifully on the grill. I used peppers on the skewers too, and the whole tray disappeared before I could get seconds.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save these bourbon bacon BBQ chicken kebabs for your next grill night when you want sticky glaze, crisp bacon edges, and juicy chicken all on one skewer.

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The Part That Keeps the Bacon Crisp Before the Chicken Overcooks

Bacon-wrapped skewers can go wrong in one of two ways: the chicken dries out while the bacon is still pale, or the bacon crisps before the chicken is done. This recipe avoids both by using thin bacon, cut chicken pieces that are close in size, and a medium grill instead of high heat. That slower heat gives the bacon time to render while the glaze has time to caramelize instead of scorching.

The other mistake is overloading the skewers. Leave a little space between pieces so the heat can move around them. Crowding turns the bacon soft because it steams against the chicken, and you lose the texture that makes these worth making.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Kebabs

Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs smoky glazed
  • Chicken breasts — Chicken breasts stay clean-tasting and cook fast, which matters here because the bacon already adds richness. Cut the pieces into even chunks so every skewer finishes at the same time. Thighs can work, but they’ll cook a little longer and won’t give you the same firm kebab texture.
  • Bacon — Thin-cut bacon is the smart move. Thick bacon stays chewy too long and can leave the chicken underdone. If your bacon slices are large, halve them before wrapping so they hug the chicken tightly instead of unraveling on the grill.
  • BBQ sauce — This is the base of the glaze, so use one you already like on its own. A smoky or slightly tangy sauce works best because the bourbon and brown sugar push it toward sweet fast. If your sauce is very sweet, cut the brown sugar back a bit so the glaze doesn’t turn syrupy before the bacon crisps.
  • Bourbon — Bourbon adds warmth and depth, not a strong boozy flavor. It needs the heat to cook off the sharp edge and leave behind that caramel-like note. If you want to skip it, use apple juice plus a splash of vanilla for a softer, sweeter finish, though the glaze will lose some complexity.
  • Brown sugar and Worcestershire sauce — Brown sugar helps the glaze cling and brown, while Worcestershire deepens the sauce so it tastes savory instead of flat. Don’t swap either one for plain white sugar or the glaze will taste thinner and less rounded.

How to Grill the Kebabs Without Losing the Glaze

Mixing the Bourbon BBQ Glaze

Stir the BBQ sauce, bourbon, brown sugar, and Worcestershire sauce until the sugar dissolves and the mixture looks smooth. You want it loose enough to brush on, not thick like a dipping sauce, because it will tighten up on the grill. If the sugar sits in gritty clumps, keep stirring for another minute before using it.

Wrapping and Resting the Chicken

Wrap each chicken chunk with half a bacon slice and secure it tightly so the seam stays underneath when it goes on the skewer. Marinate the wrapped chicken for at least an hour so the glaze seasons the meat, but don’t push it much past four hours or the bacon can get too soft. This is the stage where people rush; if the wrap is loose now, it will unwind once the fat starts to render.

Threading and Grilling

Thread the wrapped chicken onto soaked skewers, alternating with peppers and onions if you’re using them. Grill over medium heat for 6 to 7 minutes per side, basting as you go, until the bacon is crisping at the edges and the chicken reaches 165°F. If the glaze starts to darken too fast, move the skewers to a cooler part of the grill; burnt sugar tastes bitter long before the chicken is done.

Finishing for the Best Texture

Pull the kebabs off the grill and let them rest for a few minutes before serving. That short rest keeps the juices in the chicken instead of spilling onto the platter. The bacon will also firm up just a little more as it cools, which is when the texture gets best.

How to Adapt These Kebabs for the Grill You Have and the Crowd You’re Feeding

Make Them Without Bourbon

Swap the bourbon for apple juice or chicken broth plus a teaspoon of vanilla. You’ll lose the deep caramel note, but the glaze will still brown well and stay family-friendly. This version tastes a little softer and sweeter, which works nicely if you’re serving kids or anyone avoiding alcohol.

Turn Them Gluten-Free

Use a gluten-free BBQ sauce and check that your Worcestershire sauce is certified gluten-free. Those are the only ingredients that usually need attention here. The texture stays the same, and no other part of the method needs to change.

Add Vegetables Between the Chicken

Bell peppers and onions add color and help stretch the skewers for a bigger crowd. Cut them into pieces that are similar in size to the chicken chunks so they cook at the same pace. Softer vegetables like zucchini can work, but they release more moisture and won’t hold up quite as well over the grill.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The bacon softens a bit, but the flavor holds well.
  • Freezer: These freeze better after cooking than before. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw in the refrigerator overnight.
  • Reheating: Reheat in a 350°F oven or air fryer until hot. The mistake to avoid is the microwave, which turns the bacon rubbery and can dry out the chicken before the glaze warms through.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

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 sitting in its own fat. Broil for the last minute or two if you want more color, but watch closely because the glaze can go from glossy to burnt fast.

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

Wrap the bacon tightly and place the seam on the underside of the chicken before skewering. Chilling the wrapped pieces for a bit before grilling also helps them stay put. If the bacon is cut too thick or the pieces are too large, they’re more likely to unravel as the fat melts.

Can I marinate these overnight?+

I wouldn’t. The bacon can start to get mushy and the texture changes before you ever hit the grill. One to four hours is the sweet spot: enough time for flavor, not so long that the wrap loses its shape.

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

Use an instant-read thermometer and pull the kebabs when the thickest piece of chicken hits 165°F. The bacon should be crisping, not fully brittle, at that point. If you keep grilling just to brown the bacon more, the chicken usually goes dry before the bacon gets where you want it.

Can I prep these ahead for a party?+

Yes. You can wrap and skewer them a few hours ahead, then keep them covered in the refrigerator until grill time. Hold off on basting until they hit the heat, or the sugar in the glaze can start softening the bacon before it cooks.

Bourbon Bacon BBQ Chicken Kebabs

Bourbon chicken kebabs with bacon-wrapped chunks and a smoky-sweet bourbon BBQ glaze. Juicy, grill-charred kebabs with crisp bacon and a glossy basting finish—made for easy 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: 520

Ingredients
  

Bacon-wrapped chicken kebabs
  • 2 lb chicken breasts
  • 12 bacon
  • 1 tbsp BBQ sauce
  • 0.25 cup bourbon
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 can (15 oz) wooden skewers Soak before using.
  • 1 bell peppers Optional; cut into chunks to alternate on skewers.
  • 1 onions Optional; cut into chunks to alternate on skewers.

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Wrap the chicken with bacon
  1. Cut the chicken breasts into chunks and wrap each piece with half a bacon slice, then secure the wrap so it stays on during grilling. Aim for even coverage so the bacon crisps on the edges.
Make the bourbon BBQ glaze
  1. Mix BBQ sauce, bourbon, brown sugar, and Worcestershire sauce until the brown sugar dissolves and the glaze looks smooth. Keep it nearby so you can baste as the kebabs grill.
Marinate
  1. Place the wrapped chicken in a bowl or container and marinate for 1-4 hours, covered. For best flavor, marinate on the longer end; refrigerate at all times.
Skewer the kebabs
  1. Thread the marinated chicken onto soaked wooden skewers and alternate with bell peppers and onions if using. Leave a little space between pieces so heat can crisp the bacon.
Grill and baste
  1. Grill the kebabs over medium heat for 6-7 minutes per side, basting with the marinade during grilling. You want visible caramelization and bacon getting crisp as they cook.
  2. Continue grilling until the bacon is crispy and the chicken reaches 165°F in the thickest piece, then move to a plate. The center should be fully cooked with clear juices.

Notes

For a stronger bourbon glaze, reserve a portion of the marinade before it touches raw chicken, then use that reserved portion for basting. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 3 days; freeze cooked kebabs for up to 2 months (reheat to 165°F). For a lighter option, use turkey bacon while keeping the same bourbon BBQ glaze.
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