Grilled garlic butter steak and shrimp kabobs land on the plate with the kind of contrast that keeps people reaching for one more skewer: juicy sirloin with a little char, shrimp that stay plump and tender, and vegetables that pick up just enough smoke to balance the butter. The garlic butter does more than add flavor here. It ties the steak, shrimp, peppers, and onions together so every bite tastes deliberate instead of crowded.
The trick is treating the steak and shrimp differently even though they end up on the same skewer. Sirloin can handle a short marinade and a hot grill. Shrimp cannot sit around in acid or butter too long without turning firm, so the lemon stays light and the marinating time stays short. Reserving half the garlic butter for basting gives you that glossy finish without washing out the grill marks.
Below, I’ve included the part that matters most for kabobs like these: how to keep the shrimp from overcooking while the steak gets the sear it needs, plus a few smart swaps if you’re working with different vegetables or want to serve these a different way.
The shrimp stayed juicy and the steak was still tender after grilling, and the garlic butter gave everything that rich finish without making the skewers greasy.
Save these grilled garlic butter steak and shrimp kabobs for the night you want surf and turf with smoky grill marks and a buttery finish.
The Grill Marks Matter More Than the Clock
With kabobs like these, the biggest mistake is chasing doneness by time alone. Shrimp cook fast, steak cubes cook fast, and vegetables need just enough heat to soften without going limp. A hot grill gives you color before the meat dries out, which is why medium-high heat matters more here than a long, gentle cook.
Keep the pieces close in size so they finish together. If your steak cubes are much larger than the shrimp, the shrimp will overcook while you wait for the beef to catch up. The other common miss is overcrowding the skewer. Leave a little space between pieces so the heat can reach every side instead of steaming the middle.
What the Garlic Butter Is Actually Doing Here

- Sirloin steak — Sirloin gives you enough beefy flavor to stand up to the shrimp and butter without needing a long marinade. Cut it into even cubes so it stays tender and cooks at the same pace as the vegetables.
- Large shrimp — Large shrimp hold up best on the grill. Smaller shrimp overcook before the steak is ready, and extra-large shrimp can make the skewers awkward to turn.
- Butter — Melted butter carries the garlic and parsley and gives the kabobs that glossy finish. Use real butter here; a substitute won’t coat the meat the same way or brown as nicely on the grill.
- Lemon juice — Just enough lemon brightens the richness without starting to “cook” the shrimp in the marinade. Keep it measured. Too much acid is what turns shrimp firm and chalky before they ever hit the grill.
- Bell peppers and onions — These add color, sweetness, and a little char. Cut them large enough that they don’t fall apart while turning, and keep the onion pieces layered so they stay on the skewer.
- Wooden or metal skewers — Metal skewers conduct heat and are easy to reuse. If you use wooden skewers, soak them long enough that the ends don’t scorch before the kabobs are done.
Building the Skewers So Everything Finishes Together
Mix the Garlic Butter First
Stir the melted butter, garlic, parsley, lemon juice, salt, and pepper together until the garlic is evenly distributed. That butter does double duty here: part of it coats the steak and shrimp, and the rest becomes the basting sauce. If the garlic sits in one clump, it burns in spots on the grill instead of flavoring the whole skewer.
Marinate Briefly, Not Long
Coat the steak and shrimp in half of the garlic butter and let them sit for 30 minutes. That’s long enough for the garlic and herbs to cling without pushing the shrimp into a rubbery texture. Pull the seafood out if you run short on time before grilling rather than leaving it to sit much longer.
Thread With the Heat in Mind
Alternate steak, shrimp, and vegetables on each skewer so the finished kabobs look balanced and cook evenly. Put similar-sized pieces near each other, and don’t pack them tightly together. Tight skewers steam; loose skewers char and stay juicy. If you’re using wooden skewers, center the food so the ends can stay out of the hottest part of the grill.
Grill and Baste at the Same Time
Cook over medium-high heat for 3 to 4 minutes per side, turning once and brushing with the reserved garlic butter as the kabobs cook. You’re looking for shrimp that are pink and curled, steak with browned edges, and vegetables with charred spots but still a little bite. If the butter starts to flare, move the skewers to a cooler part of the grill for a minute instead of backing off the heat too early.
Three Ways to Work These Kabobs Around Your Menu
Dairy-Free Version
Swap the butter for a good olive oil or a plant-based butter that melts cleanly. You’ll lose a little of the rich finish that real butter gives, but the garlic, parsley, and lemon still keep the kabobs bright and savory.
Vegetable Swaps That Hold Up on the Grill
Use zucchini chunks, mushrooms, or cherry tomatoes in place of or alongside the peppers and onions. Keep the pieces substantial so they don’t disappear over the heat, and avoid watery vegetables that collapse before the steak is done.
Make Them Gluten-Free Without Changing a Thing
This recipe is naturally gluten-free as written, so the only thing to watch is your seasoning and butter labels if you’re using packaged versions. Serve with rice, potatoes, or grilled vegetables and you’ve got a full meal without any extra work.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The shrimp will firm up a little after chilling, so expect a slightly less juicy texture.
- Freezer: These kabobs don’t freeze well once cooked. Shrimp and peppers both lose their texture after thawing, so I only freeze the raw cubed steak if I’m planning ahead.
- Reheating: Warm gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until heated through. High heat dries out the shrimp fast, and that’s the fastest way to turn leftovers tough.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Grilled Garlic Butter Steak and Shrimp Kabobs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Mix melted butter, garlic, parsley, lemon juice, salt, and pepper until combined and glossy.
- Reserve half of the garlic butter for basting so it stays ready for grilling.
- Coat the sirloin steak and large shrimp with the remaining garlic butter, then refrigerate for 30 minutes.
- Thread steak, shrimp, and bell peppers and onions alternately onto skewers, leaving a little space between pieces.
- Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for 3 minutes per side, basting during grilling for a shiny surface and visible butter gloss.
- Flip and grill for an additional 1 to 4 minutes per side, basting again, until steak is browned and shrimp are opaque and pink.
- Serve immediately while the garlic butter is still melted and the shrimp are tender.


