Let me be straight with you.
When someone first told me to put fruit in a BBQ sandwich, I laughed. It sounded ridiculous. But I tried it anyway. And now I make this almost every week.
These BBQ Jackfruit Sandwiches are saucy, smoky, and genuinely filling. The jackfruit pulls apart into soft, stringy shreds. The chickpeas add real bulk and body. The spices do the heavy lifting on flavor. Pile everything onto a toasted brioche bun with cold, crunchy slaw and you’ve got a sandwich that holds its own against anything with meat in it.
Ready in 25 minutes. No special tools. No weird ingredients.
Just a good pan and a hungry appetite.

What Sets This Recipe Apart
Most BBQ jackfruit recipes are just jackfruit plus sauce. That’s it. And that’s exactly why so many of them fall flat.
Jackfruit on its own is stringy. It’s light. It can feel more like a side dish than a real meal.
This recipe fixes that with chickpeas.
Pulse them with garlic in a food processor and you get a coarse, chunky crumble. Stir that into the jackfruit shreds and suddenly the filling has weight. Substance. It actually sticks with you. Plus you’re getting extra protein and fiber without any effort at all.
Then there’s the spice situation. Paprika, chili powder, and onion powder go in before the sauce. Brown sugar softens the edges just enough. And when you let the whole thing sit in a hot pan without stirring?
You get caramelized, slightly crispy bits throughout the filling. Those bits are everything. That’s where the smokiness lives.
Ingredients at a Glance
| Ingredient | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Olive oil | 1/4 cup | Extra-virgin is best here |
| Young jackfruit in brine, canned | 14-ounce can | Drain and rinse really well |
| Canned chickpeas | 1/2 cup | Drain and rinse; adds bulk and protein |
| Garlic cloves | 2 cloves | Fresh garlic only, please |
| Brown sugar | 1 tablespoon | Rounds out the smoky and savory flavors |
| Paprika | Several good shakes | Smoked paprika is even better if you have it |
| Chili powder | Several good shakes | Adjust based on how much heat you want |
| Onion powder | Several good shakes | Adds depth without any chopping |
| Salt | A pinch | Taste and adjust again at the end |
| Barbecue sauce | 1/4 cup | Thick and smoky is the move |
| Pre-made coleslaw bag mix | As needed | Or: cabbage, mayo, vinegar, sugar, salt |
| Brioche buns, toasted | 4 buns | Any sturdy bun works fine |
| Optional toppings | To taste | Avocado, pepperoncini, pickles, hot sauce |
Prep Time: 10 minutes Cook Time: 15 minutes Total Time: 25 minutes Servings: 4 Difficulty: Easy
New to Jackfruit? Here’s What You Need to Know
Jackfruit is a tropical fruit. Grows all over South and Southeast Asia. When it’s young and unripe, it has almost zero flavor on its own.
And that’s actually the whole point.
It works like a sponge. Cook it with spices and sauce and it soaks up every bit of flavor you throw at it. The texture after cooking? Genuinely shredded-meat-like. It pulls apart in strands just like slow-cooked pork.
When you go shopping, here’s the one thing that really matters:
- Buy canned young green jackfruit packed in water or brine
- Find it at Asian grocery stores, health food stores, or larger supermarkets
- Never buy jackfruit in syrup. That version is ripe, sweet, and completely wrong for this recipe
Get that detail right and you’re already most of the way to a great sandwich.

How to Make BBQ Jackfruit Sandwiches
Before you turn on the stove, get everything ready. Drain the jackfruit. Rinse the chickpeas. Measure your spices. Have your buns waiting by the toaster.
This cook moves fast. Being set up ahead makes it feel totally effortless.
Step 1: Shred the Jackfruit
Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Wait until it shimmers. Add the drained jackfruit to the pan.
Now grab the back of a wooden spoon and start pressing down on each piece. They break apart on their own into rough, stringy shreds. Work through the pan until the big chunks are mostly gone. A little variation in size is totally fine. It actually looks more natural and rustic that way.
Pro Tip: Give this step a full extra minute. Getting the jackfruit into finer shreds makes the whole filling feel closer to real pulled meat. Don’t rush it.
Step 2: Build the Chickpea and Garlic Mixture
While the jackfruit heats up, toss the chickpeas and garlic into a small food processor or chopper. Pulse about five or six times. You’re going for a coarse, chunky texture. Think rough crumble, not hummus. The chickpeas should still have some body to them.
Scrape that mixture straight into the pan.
Stir everything together. Then add the brown sugar, paprika, chili powder, onion powder, and salt. Toss until every shred is coated. The pan should start smelling amazing right about now.

Step 3: Add the BBQ Sauce and Back Off
Pour the barbecue sauce over everything. Stir once to spread it around evenly. Then put the spoon down.
Walk away. Let it cook.
Give it two to three minutes of mostly undisturbed time in the pan. The sauce hits the hot surface and caramelizes. It builds up slightly crispy, charred edges all through the filling. Those are the bits that taste smoky and roasted instead of just saucy and soft.
Give it a gentle stir. Let it sit again. Repeat one more time. Then take the pan off the heat.
Pro Tip: Think of it like searing meat. You wouldn’t flip a steak every 30 seconds. Same rule applies here. The less you stir, the better the browning. Be patient and the pan will reward you.
Step 4: Sort the Slaw
The filling is almost ready. Now handle the slaw.
A store-bought coleslaw bag is honestly ideal on a weeknight. There’s no shame in it. If you’d rather go homemade, here’s all you need:
- Thinly sliced green or purple cabbage
- A spoonful of mayo
- A splash of lemon juice or vinegar
- A small pinch of sugar
- Salt to taste
Toss it together until it’s creamy, slightly tangy, and cold. This is what balances out the warm, smoky filling. Set it aside until the sandwich is ready to build.
Step 5: Assemble and Eat
Toast your brioche buns until the cut sides go golden and just a little crispy. Set the bottom bun on your plate.
Load it up with a generous scoop of the BBQ jackfruit filling. Add a big handful of slaw on top. Then pile on whatever you like:
- Sliced avocado for richness
- Pickles to cut through the sweet and smoky
- Pepperoncini for a mild tangy bite
- Hot sauce if you want heat
Press the top bun down gently. Take a second to appreciate it. Then dig in.

Ways to Mix It Up
The sandwich as written is a full meal. But here are a few easy ways to take it in a different direction:
- Swap the bun: Ciabatta rolls, whole grain buns, or toasted flatbread all hold up well. Sturdier bread is better when you’re loading on toppings
- Make it a bowl: Ditch the bun. Serve the filling over steamed rice or roasted sweet potatoes with slaw piled on top
- Crank the heat: Add a teaspoon of hot sauce or a pinch of cayenne right into the pan with the BBQ sauce
- Taco night version: Scoop the filling into warm corn or flour tortillas. Top with pickled red onions and fresh cilantro
- Using jackfruit in water: Can’t find brine-packed? Water-packed works too. Just finish with a squeeze of fresh lime juice to brighten the whole thing up
Storage and Reheating
The filling keeps beautifully on its own. Here’s the simple breakdown:
- Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to four days
- Reheat in a skillet over medium heat with a small splash of water to loosen the sauce back up
- Ready again in about three minutes
Keep the slaw and buns separate from the filling. Assembled sandwiches go soggy fast. Build them fresh each time and they’ll taste exactly as good as they did the first day.
Why This Sandwich Keeps Winning
I’ve made a lot of meatless sandwiches. Some are decent. A lot are forgettable.
This one is neither.
It’s fast enough to pull together on a weeknight when there’s nothing planned for dinner. It’s good enough to serve when people come over. The ingredients are cheap and easy to keep on hand. A can of jackfruit and a can of chickpeas take up almost no space in the pantry and last for months.
The chickpea trick is the piece I’d never drop. It changes everything about how the filling feels. Without it, jackfruit can come across as too thin and light. With it, you get something chunky and hearty that actually satisfies.
Last time I made this, I served it to a group of people who eat meat every single day. No complaints. Zero. One person asked me quietly before leaving if I’d send them the recipe. That’s the kind of reaction this sandwich gets.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I find canned jackfruit at a regular grocery store?
More and more mainstream grocery stores carry it now. Check the international foods aisle or near specialty canned produce. Asian grocery stores almost always have it. If your local store doesn’t stock it, it’s easy to find online.
What if I can’t find jackfruit at all?
Shredded portobello mushrooms are the closest swap. They absorb smoky, savory flavors really well and give you a similar hearty texture. Pulled hearts of palm is another option some people like. The taste won’t be identical, but with the same spices and sauce, the sandwich still delivers.
Can I skip the chickpeas?
You can. But I really wouldn’t. The chickpeas are what make the filling feel like a real meal rather than a light snack. Jackfruit alone just doesn’t have the same body. If you’re out of chickpeas, try stirring a few tablespoons of hummus into the pan near the end. A handful of readers have tried it and said it works surprisingly well.
Can I make this ahead for meal prep or a party?
Yes, easily. Cook the full batch, cool it completely, and refrigerate it. Reheat in a skillet before serving. You can double or triple the recipe without any issues. Just keep the slaw and buns stored separately until you’re ready to eat so nothing gets soggy.
What kind of BBQ sauce should I use?
Thick and smoky. Thin or very sweet sauces make the filling loose and wet instead of nicely glazed. Look for a sauce with smoked ingredients or molasses listed near the top. That said, this recipe is pretty forgiving. Your favorite sauce will most likely work just fine.
Last Thing
This sandwich doesn’t ask a lot from you. Thirty minutes, a couple of cans, and one good pan.
What it gives back is bold smoky flavor, satisfying texture, and a meal that genuinely impresses. The chickpea move is worth remembering. The undisturbed pan technique is worth practicing. And the toasted brioche bun is absolutely worth the extra 90 seconds.
Make it tonight. And when you do, make extra. Future you will be very glad you did.

BBQ Jackfruit Sandwiches
Ingredients
BBQ Jackfruit Filling
- 1/4 cup olive oil extra-virgin
- 14 oz canned young green jackfruit in brine drained and rinsed well
- 1/2 cup canned chickpeas drained and rinsed
- 2 garlic cloves fresh
- 1 tbsp brown sugar
- 1 tsp paprika smoked paprika preferred
- 1 tsp chili powder adjust to taste
- 1 tsp onion powder
- 1 pinch salt taste and adjust
- 1/4 cup barbecue sauce thick and smoky style
Coleslaw
- pre-made coleslaw bag mix or thinly sliced green/purple cabbage
- 1 tbsp mayonnaise for homemade slaw
- 1 tsp lemon juice or vinegar
- 1 pinch sugar
For Serving
- 4 brioche buns toasted
- avocado optional topping
- pickles optional topping
- pepperoncini optional topping
- hot sauce optional topping
Instructions
- Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the drained jackfruit to the pan.
- Using the back of a wooden spoon, press down on each piece of jackfruit until it breaks apart into rough, stringy shreds. Work through the pan for about 2 minutes until most big chunks are gone.
- Pulse the chickpeas and garlic together in a small food processor 5–6 times until you get a coarse, chunky crumble. Do not over-process — you want texture, not hummus.
- Scrape the chickpea and garlic mixture into the pan with the jackfruit. Stir to combine. Add the brown sugar, paprika, chili powder, onion powder, and salt. Toss until everything is evenly coated.
- Pour the barbecue sauce over the filling and stir once to spread evenly. Let the mixture cook undisturbed for 2–3 minutes so the sauce caramelizes and crispy bits form. Stir gently, then let sit again. Repeat once more, then remove from heat.
- While the filling rests, toss the coleslaw mix with mayonnaise, lemon juice or vinegar, a pinch of sugar, and salt to taste. Set aside.
- Toast the brioche buns until the cut sides are golden. Load each bottom bun with a generous scoop of BBQ jackfruit filling, top with coleslaw, and add any optional toppings. Press the top bun down and serve immediately.










