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Jalapeño Peach Chicken Skewers

Jalapeño peach chicken skewers hit that sweet-heat balance that keeps people reaching for one more piece. The peaches turn jammy on the grill, the chicken stays juicy, and the jalapeño ... Read more

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Jalapeño Peach Chicken Skewers

Jalapeño peach chicken skewers hit that sweet-heat balance that keeps people reaching for one more piece. The peaches turn jammy on the grill, the chicken stays juicy, and the jalapeño glaze adds just enough bite to keep the sweetness from going flat. When everything chars a little at the edges, the whole skewer tastes like summer dinner done right.

The trick here is splitting the peach-jalapeño mixture before it ever touches the chicken. Half becomes the marinade, and the other half stays clean for basting, which keeps you from brushing raw chicken juices back onto the finished skewers. Pureeing the peaches also helps the glaze cling instead of running off the grill grates, and a short marinade is enough because the lime juice and salt in the soy sauce do the work quickly.

Below you’ll find the small details that matter most: how to keep the peaches from turning mushy, when to baste so the glaze caramelizes instead of burning, and what to swap if you want these skewers milder or hotter.

The glaze thickened on the grill instead of dripping off, and the peaches held their shape just enough to get those caramelized edges. I made these on skewers for a cookout and they disappeared before the burgers.

★★★★★— Megan R.

These jalapeño peach chicken skewers caramelize beautifully on the grill, with sweet peaches and a sticky spicy glaze in every bite.

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The Reason These Skewers Stay Juicy Instead of Drying Out

The biggest failure with grilled chicken skewers is usually heat management. Chicken breast cooks fast, and once it goes past the line, there’s no glaze in the world that can pull it back. This recipe avoids that by keeping the pieces fairly large, giving them a short marinade, and grilling over medium-high heat with regular turning instead of blasting one side until it seizes up.

The peaches matter here, too. If you thread them on too early or use fruit that’s overly soft, they’ll collapse before the chicken finishes. Firm-ripe peaches hold their shape long enough to caramelize, which gives you those sweet little grill marks without turning the skewer into jam.

What the Peach Mixture Is Doing Before It Ever Hits the Grill

Jalapeño Peach Chicken Skewers sweet heat grilled
  • Peaches — You need two textures from the peaches: one batch pureed into the glaze and one batch cut into chunks for the skewers. The puree gives body and natural sweetness, while the fresh pieces bring bursts of fruit that soften just enough on the grill. Use ripe peaches with a little give, but not ones that feel mushy in your hand.
  • Jalapeños — The minced jalapeños in the glaze bring the heat, and the sliced rounds on the skewers add visual heat and a fresher pepper bite. Removing the seeds keeps the spice in a comfortable range without flattening the flavor. If you want more fire, leave a few seeds in the puree rather than piling on extra slices.
  • Honey — This helps the glaze caramelize and stick to the chicken as it grills. Maple syrup can work in a pinch, but the flavor gets darker and less bright. Honey gives the cleanest finish here.
  • Soy sauce — This adds salt and depth, and it keeps the peach glaze from tasting like candy. Use low-sodium soy if that’s what you keep around; the recipe still works. Coconut aminos will make the glaze sweeter and a little less punchy.
  • Chicken thighs or breasts — Thighs stay a little more forgiving on the grill, while breasts give you a leaner result and need a closer eye. Either one works if the pieces are cut evenly. Uneven chunks are what cause some skewers to dry out while others are still catching up.

Getting the Glaze to Caramelize Without Burning the Fruit

Build the Marinade First

Blend the peach puree, minced jalapeños, honey, soy sauce, lime juice, garlic, and olive oil until smooth, then split it in half right away. One half coats the chicken, and the other half stays untouched for basting later. If you forget to reserve clean glaze, you’ll either run out too early or end up brushing raw marinade onto food that’s nearly done.

Let the Chicken Take on Just Enough Flavor

Marinate the chicken for 30 minutes, not half the afternoon. The lime and soy work quickly, and a long soak can start to make the outside of the meat soft instead of seasoned. You want the surface coated and lightly flavored, not cured.

Thread for Even Cooking

Alternate chicken, peach chunks, and jalapeño slices on soaked skewers so the heat moves through the skewer evenly. Keep the pieces close together but not crushed. If the fruit is packed too tightly, it steams; if the spacing is too loose, the skewer cooks unevenly and the glaze won’t cling as well.

Grill, Turn, and Glaze in Batches

Cook over medium-high heat for 12 to 14 minutes, turning every 3 minutes and basting with the reserved glaze after the first turn. The glaze should darken and bubble at the edges, not blacken. Pull the skewers when the chicken hits 165°F and the peaches have caramelized spots but still hold their shape.

Make It Milder for Kids or Heat-Sensitive Guests

Use one jalapeño instead of two, and remove every seed before blending. You’ll still get the pepper flavor, but the glaze lands more sweet than sharp. If you want almost no heat, skip the fresh jalapeño slices on the skewers and lean on the garlic, honey, and lime instead.

Turn It into a Dairy-Free Grill Dinner

This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which makes it easy to serve with grilled corn, rice, or a crisp salad without changing the sauce. That’s part of why it works so well for cookouts: the glaze brings enough richness on its own that you don’t need butter or cream to round it out.

Swap in Thighs for a More Forgiving Skewer

Chicken thighs stay juicier if you’re grilling over a flame that runs a little hotter than planned. They also handle the sticky glaze without drying out as fast as breast meat. If you use thighs, still cut them into even pieces so the skewers finish at the same time.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The peaches soften a bit, but the flavor stays good.
  • Freezer: Freeze the cooked chicken and peaches off the skewers for up to 2 months. The texture of the fruit gets softer after thawing, so this is better for rice bowls than for serving on sticks.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven until warmed through. High heat dries out the chicken fast and can turn the peaches to mush before the center is hot.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use canned peaches instead of fresh peaches?+

Fresh peaches hold their shape better on the grill, which is what gives these skewers that caramelized edge. Canned peaches tend to be too soft and can fall apart before the chicken is done. If canned is all you have, drain them very well and use them only in the glaze, not on the skewers.

How do I keep the chicken from drying out on the grill?+

Cut the chicken into even pieces and grill over medium-high heat, not high heat. Turning every 3 minutes helps the outside caramelize before the inside overcooks. Pull it as soon as it hits 165°F, because the carryover heat will finish the job while it rests for a minute or two.

How do I stop the glaze from burning before the chicken is done?+

Reserve half the glaze before marinating so you’re always basting with clean sauce. Start basting after the first turn, not at the beginning, because the sugars in the honey need a little time on the grill before they start to darken. If the heat is too aggressive, move the skewers to a cooler part of the grill for the last few minutes.

Can I make these jalapeño peach chicken skewers ahead of time?+

Yes, but only prep them ahead, not grill them far in advance. You can marinate the chicken for 30 minutes and thread the skewers a few hours before cooking, then keep them covered and chilled until you’re ready to grill. Cooked skewers are best right off the grill, when the peaches are still glossy and the glaze is sticky.

How do I keep wooden skewers from burning?+

Soak wooden skewers in water for at least 30 minutes before threading the chicken and fruit. That keeps them from scorching while the glaze caramelizes. If you use metal skewers, you can skip the soaking, but the chicken may cook a little faster because the metal conducts heat.

Jalapeño Peach Chicken Skewers

jalapeño peach chicken skewers with grilled chicken and fresh peach chunks threaded on skewers, caramelized in a jalapeño-peach glaze. Sweet heat, char marks, and a glossy glaze coat every piece for a standout summer kabobs finish.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 14 minutes
marinating 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 4 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Jalapeño-peach glaze and marinade
  • 1.5 lb boneless chicken breast or thighs Cut into 1.5-inch pieces.
  • 3 ripe peaches Pitted and cut into chunks.
  • 2 jalapeños Sliced into rounds for threading.
  • 3 peaches Pureed (about 3 peaches total puree).
  • 2 jalapeños Minced (seeds removed for mild).
  • 3 tbsp honey
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp lime juice
  • 2 clove garlic Minced.
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make the jalapeño-peach glaze
  1. Blend the peach puree, minced jalapeños, honey, soy sauce, lime juice, garlic, and olive oil until smooth, then reserve half for glazing.
  2. Keep the reserved half covered so it stays ready for basting during grilling.
Marinate the chicken
  1. Marinate the chicken in the other half of the peach-jalapeño mixture for 30 minutes.
  2. During marinating, refrigerate the chicken so it stays cold and evenly flavored.
Assemble the skewers
  1. Soak skewers in water before threading so they don’t burn on the grill.
  2. Thread marinated chicken, peach chunks, and jalapeño rounds alternately on the soaked skewers.
  3. Arrange the finished skewers on a sheet pan in a single layer for easy transfer to the grill.
Grill and glaze
  1. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat, then place skewers on the grate.
  2. Grill for 12-14 minutes, turning every 3 minutes and basting with the reserved glaze each time.
  3. Cook until the chicken reaches 165F and the glaze looks caramelized with a glossy char on the peach and chicken surfaces.
  4. Let the skewers rest briefly off-heat just long enough to stop the surface juices from running, then serve immediately with extra jalapeño peach glaze.

Notes

Pro tip: For the sweetest char, baste during the last 4-5 minutes only and reapply thin coats so the glaze can caramelize instead of burning. Refrigerate leftovers in a sealed container up to 3 days; freeze chicken skewers without the extra glaze for up to 2 months and thaw in the fridge before reheating. For a lower-sodium option, use reduced-sodium soy sauce and keep the honey amount the same.
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