Pull-apart sliders only work when every layer earns its place, and these honey mustard BLT chicken sliders do exactly that. The rolls toast into a buttery top that gives way to juicy chicken, crisp bacon, cool lettuce, and tomatoes that still taste fresh instead of soggy. The honey mustard ties everything together with enough tang to cut through the bacon and cheese, but not so much that it takes over.
The little trick here is timing. The rolls get brushed with garlic-parsley butter before baking, which helps the tops turn golden while the inside stays soft enough to pull apart cleanly. The lettuce and tomato go in at the very end, after baking, so they keep their crunch and the sliders don’t collapse into a wet mess.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most, from building the layers in the right order to the best way to keep the bacon crisp. If you’ve ever had sliders that looked great until the second they hit the table, this version fixes that.
The honey mustard soaked into the chicken just enough, and the buns came out golden without getting hard. I served them straight from the pan and there wasn’t a single one left.
Save these honey mustard BLT chicken sliders for game day, parties, or any night when you want a pan of golden buns and a crowd-pleasing pull-apart finish.
The Part That Keeps These Sliders from Turning Soggy
The mistake most slider recipes make is loading the wet ingredients too early. Tomato and lettuce look great in the pan, but once they heat up, they collapse fast and turn the bottom buns slippery. These sliders stay sturdy because the baked layers are all built first, then the fresh toppings go on right before serving.
Another reason this works is the buttered top. Brushing the rolls after assembly gives you a golden, fragrant crust without drying out the bread underneath. Baking covered first traps enough steam to melt the cheese and warm the chicken through, then the uncovered finish dries the top just enough to give you that pull-apart bakery look.
What Each Layer Is Doing in These Sliders

- Hawaiian sweet rolls — These bring a soft, slightly sweet base that plays well with the tangy mustard and salty bacon. Any soft dinner roll will work, but Hawaiian rolls give you the best contrast and the nicest pull-apart texture.
- Grilled chicken breasts — Grilled chicken keeps the sliders from feeling heavy and gives you enough structure to slice and stack. If you’re using leftover chicken, warm it gently first so it doesn’t cool the cheese too fast.
- Provolone cheese — Provolone melts cleanly and adds a mild, savory layer that doesn’t fight the honey mustard. Mozzarella works in a pinch, but it’s softer and less flavorful here.
- Honey mustard — This is the glue of the whole sandwich. The mayo gives it body, Dijon gives it bite, honey smooths the sharp edges, and the vinegar keeps it from tasting flat.
- Butter topping — The garlic powder and parsley aren’t just decoration; they season the bread top so the sliders taste finished even before the fresh vegetables go on.
Building the Layers So the Bottom Buns Stay Intact
Whisk the Sauce Until It Tastes Balanced
Stir the mayonnaise, Dijon, honey, and apple cider vinegar until the sauce looks smooth and glossy. It should taste tangy first, then sweet, with enough richness to cling to the rolls. If it tastes flat, the sauce probably needs a touch more vinegar rather than more honey, because sweetness is already coming from the bread.
Stack in the Right Order
Slice the rolls in half as one slab so the sliders stay aligned, then spread the honey mustard across the cut sides. Layer the provolone first, then the chicken, then the bacon. The cheese under the chicken helps catch the juices before they soak into the bread, which is the difference between a neat slider and a collapsing one.
Cover First, Then Brown
Brush the tops with the melted butter mixture and bake covered for the first stretch. That covered bake melts the cheese and warms the filling without overbrowning the rolls. Remove the foil for the last few minutes only when the tops are already hot and set; that’s when you get the golden finish without drying out the bread.
Add the Fresh Crunch at the End
Hold the lettuce and tomato until the sliders come out of the oven. Add them after baking, slice the pan into individual servings, and serve right away. If you tuck them in before the oven, the lettuce wilts and the tomato leaks into the bread.
How to Adapt These Sliders for Different Crowds
Dairy-Free Version
Skip the provolone and use a dairy-free slice that melts well, or leave the cheese out entirely and add an extra spoonful of honey mustard for richness. Use a plant-based butter for the topping. The sliders still hold together; they just taste a little lighter and less creamy.
Gluten-Free Swaps
Use gluten-free slider buns that are sturdy enough to handle the filling, and check that your Dijon and mayonnaise are certified gluten-free. The texture won’t be quite as pillowy as Hawaiian rolls, but the flavor still lands in the same sweet-savory lane.
Swap the Chicken for Turkey
Thin-sliced leftover turkey works well here, especially if you’re using up holiday extras. Warm it just enough to take the chill off before assembling so it doesn’t cool the cheese and mute the bacon.
Make Them Bacon-Heavy for Game Day
Add another strip or two of bacon per pan if you want a more savory, party-style slider. The extra bacon makes the sandwiches richer, so I’d keep the honey mustard balanced and not overdo the honey.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store baked sliders without the lettuce and tomato for up to 3 days. The rolls soften as they sit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: Freeze the baked chicken, bacon, cheese, and rolls before adding fresh vegetables. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw in the fridge overnight.
- Reheating: Warm covered in a 325°F oven until heated through. Don’t microwave the whole stack if you can avoid it; it makes the bread rubbery and the bacon chewy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Honey Mustard BLT Chicken Sliders
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F. Slice Hawaiian sweet rolls in half lengthwise without separating them so they stay in one connected top-and-bottom set.
- Whisk mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, honey, and apple cider vinegar until smooth. Spread the honey mustard on the cut sides of the rolls.
- Layer provolone, sliced boneless chicken breasts, and crispy bacon on the roll bottoms. Place the tops on to close the sliders.
- Brush the assembled rolls with melted butter mixed with garlic powder and parsley. Make sure the top is evenly coated for a golden finish.
- Bake the sliders covered with foil at 350°F for 12 minutes. Look for the cheese to start melting and the rolls to puff slightly under the foil.
- Remove the foil and bake uncovered for 5 more minutes at 350°F. Bake until the tops are golden and the edges are lightly crisp.
- Add shredded lettuce and sliced tomatoes just before serving. Slice into individual sliders and serve immediately so the lettuce stays crisp.


