Juicy grilled chicken, melted mozzarella, ripe tomato, and fresh basil land on the plate like they were made for each other. The chicken gets a quick herb-and-garlic brush before it hits the grill, which keeps the meat seasoned all the way through instead of leaving all the flavor on the outside. Once the mozzarella melts and the balsamic glaze goes on at the end, you get that warm-cold contrast that makes every bite taste finished.
What keeps this version from falling flat is timing. The cheese goes on only for the last few minutes, so it softens without running off the chicken, and the tomatoes wait until the chicken comes off the grill so they stay bright and fresh. A little extra virgin olive oil at the end is not just garnish; it rounds out the acidity from the glaze and tomato.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: getting the chicken cooked through without drying it out, plus a few smart swaps if your tomatoes aren’t perfect or you need to adjust for what’s in your kitchen.
The mozzarella melted perfectly on the grill and the tomatoes stayed fresh and juicy instead of turning soggy. I loved how the balsamic glaze tied everything together without making the chicken taste heavy.
Grilled Chicken Caprese with melted mozzarella and balsamic glaze is the one to pin when you want a fresh, fast dinner that still looks plated with care.
The Trick to Keeping the Cheese Melted, Not Mysteriously Slid Off the Chicken
Grilled chicken caprese fails when the chicken is still too wet when it hits the grill or when the cheese goes on too early. Both problems lead to a slippery mess. Pat the chicken dry first, then brush on the oil and seasoning so it clings instead of beading up and running off the surface.
The other mistake is grilling over heat that is too aggressive. You want a medium-high grill that gives you browning without burning the outside before the center reaches 165°F. Add the mozzarella only in the last few minutes, then close the lid just long enough to soften it into a thick, creamy layer. If it sits on the grill too long, it turns oily and loses that clean, milky bite.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

- Chicken breasts — Boneless breasts work well here because they cook quickly and give you a flat surface for the cheese and toppings. If one side is much thicker, pound it to an even thickness so the grill doesn’t leave you with dry edges and a raw center.
- Olive oil — This carries the garlic and seasoning onto the chicken and helps the surface brown instead of sticking to the grates. A decent extra virgin oil is worth using for the finish too, since that final drizzle contributes flavor, not just shine.
- Garlic and Italian seasoning — These do the heavy lifting in the short marinade. Fresh garlic gives the chicken a sharper edge than garlic powder, but if you’re in a pinch, use 1 teaspoon garlic powder and keep it on the chicken long enough to hydrate in the oil.
- Fresh mozzarella — Use the fresh stuff here. Low-moisture mozzarella melts differently and gives a tighter, stringier pull, while fresh mozzarella turns soft and creamy without taking over the dish.
- Tomatoes and basil — Add these after grilling so they stay bright and aromatic. If your tomatoes are bland, salt the slices lightly for a few minutes before topping the chicken; it pulls out a little juice and sharpens the flavor.
- Balsamic glaze — This is what gives the dish that sweet-tart finish without watering anything down. If you only have balsamic vinegar, simmer it briefly until it coats a spoon, but don’t pour it on straight or the dish will taste too sharp.
Building the Grill Marks Before the Melt
Seasoning the Chicken
Mix the olive oil, minced garlic, Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper into a brushable coating, then work it over both sides of the chicken. The surface should look glossy, not drenched. If there’s too much oil pooling on the plate, it will flare on the grill and burn the garlic before the chicken cooks.
Grilling to the Right Temperature
Preheat the grill to medium-high and lay the chicken on clean grates. Leave it alone long enough to pick up defined grill marks, then flip once and cook until the thickest part reaches 165°F. If the chicken is charring before it’s cooked through, the heat is too high or the pieces are too thin in one spot; move them to a cooler part of the grill and let them finish there.
Melting and Topping
During the last three minutes, place the mozzarella on top and close the lid. You’re looking for softened edges and a glossy top, not a fully collapsed puddle. Pull the chicken off immediately, add the tomato slices and basil while the cheese is still warm enough to hold them in place, then finish with balsamic glaze and a light drizzle of olive oil.
How to Change It Without Losing the Caprese Feel
Chicken Thighs Instead of Breasts
Boneless thighs stay juicier and tolerate a little extra grill time, but they won’t give you quite the same clean, neat base for the cheese. Cook them until they reach 165°F as well, and expect a richer, slightly more rustic result.
Dairy-Free Version
Skip the mozzarella and lean harder on the tomatoes, basil, and balsamic glaze. You’ll lose the creamy melt that makes caprese feel finished, so add a little more olive oil and a pinch of flaky salt at the end to bring back some richness.
Oven or Grill Pan Method
If you can’t grill outside, sear the chicken in a hot grill pan or skillet, then finish it in a 400°F oven. That gives you the same cooked-through center and lets the mozzarella melt without scorching the outside.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 3 days. The basil will darken and the tomatoes will soften, but the chicken still reheats well.
- Freezer: The grilled chicken can be frozen without the toppings, but caprese as a finished dish doesn’t freeze well. Freeze the plain chicken tightly wrapped, then add fresh cheese, tomato, and basil after reheating.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken gently in a 325°F oven or in a covered skillet over low heat. High heat dries out the meat and turns the mozzarella rubbery, so keep the reheating slow and add fresh basil and glaze at the end.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Grilled Chicken Caprese
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Combine olive oil, garlic, Italian seasoning, salt, and pepper, then brush the mixture over the chicken breasts so they are evenly coated.
- Preheat the grill to medium-high heat for direct cooking.
- Place chicken on the grill and cook for 6-7 minutes per side until the internal temperature reaches 165°F.
- In the last 3 minutes, top each breast with mozzarella slices and close the grill lid to melt, watching for melted cheese over the edges.
- Remove the chicken from the grill and immediately top with tomato slices and fresh basil leaves so the tomatoes stay fresh and crisp.
- Drizzle with balsamic glaze and extra virgin olive oil before serving.


