Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • A turkey breast is the ideal size for small gatherings and is far faster to cook, going from fridge to table in under 2 hours.
  • You only have to keep in mind a single final target temperature, instead of having to worry about legs and breasts cooking at different rates with a whole bird.
  • Removing the turkey breast halfway through to finish roasting on its own ensures both the meat and the stuffing are cooked to the right temperature.
  • Adding pan juices to the stuffing just before reheating provides moisture and saturates it with rich turkey flavor.

Perhaps your family is small. Perhaps your friends all bailed on you the week before. Perhaps only half your family eats meat. Heck, perhaps you simply don't enjoy leftovers.*

*You weirdo.

Point is, there are any number of reasons you might have for not wanting to roast an entire turkey for Thanksgiving, but nobody should be deprived of juicy meat, crispy skin, and turkey-saturated stuffing on that day, am I right?

My initial thought was that since I already have a great method for crisp-skinned spatchco*cked roast turkey, and a roast turkey breast is essentially a spatchco*cked breast without the legs, I should just be able to use the exact same technique, throwing the breast on top of a casserole dish full of stuffing to catch the drippings. I tried it, using my classic sage and sausage stuffing recipe, and rubbing my turkey over and under the skin with some herb butter.

Simply cooking a turkey breast is far easier than cooking a whole turkey, since you only have a single final target temperature in mind, instead of having to worry about legs and breasts cooking at different rates. As soon as that breast is at 150°F, you can pull it out of the oven and let it rest.

About halfway through cooking, I realized there was a problem.

Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (1)

The Problems With Cooking Turkey Breast

While my stuffing was already pushing 180°F and starting to char around the edges, the turkey breast was not even close to finished. It still had a good 30°F to get up to my 150°F target temperature.

On top of that, the butter in the stuffing, combined with the sausage fat, and the rendering fat from the turkey breast made the stuffing unpalatably greasy—there was a huge pool of oil on top of it. This greasiness is exacerbated by the fact that if the stuffing gets much above 160°F or so, the eggs I use to bind it will curdle and break, squeezing out the fat that they were initially trapping.

Fortunately, the solution was relatively simple.

The Solution

First of all, I decreased the butter content of my stuffing, figuring that what renders from the turkey will make it plenty rich.

Second, I decided to just remove the turkey breast half way through roasting, and let it finish on its own. Once it had cooked, I then took all those exuded pan juices and poured them right back onto the stuffing.

Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (2)

Since the turkey needs to rest for about 20 minutes anyway to make sure that you don't lose all its juices, this gives you ample time to throw that stuffing back into the oven to crisp up on top and reheat to 160°F. The stuffing comes loaded with turkey flavor, but if you want even more, make sure to stuff the cavity under the breast and under the flap of fat near the neck with stuffing as well before you start to roast.

Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (3)

The best part? The whole process goes from fridge to table in under two hours. How's that for a fast holiday meal?

November 2012

Recipe Details

Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing

Prep20 mins

Cook2 hrs

Active45 mins

Total2 hrs 20 mins

Serves6to 8 servings

Ingredients

  • 8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, divided

  • 1 1/2 pounds sage sausage, removed from casing

  • 1 large onion, finely chopped (about 2 cups)

  • 4 large stalks celery, finely chopped (about 2 cups)

  • 4 cloves garlic, minced or grated on microplane, divided

  • 1/4 cup minced fresh sage leaves (or 2 teaspoons dried sage leaves)

  • 32 ounces (4 cups; 946ml) low-sodium chicken or turkey broth, preferably homemade

  • 3 large whole eggs

  • 2 1/2 pounds (about 2 loaves) high quality sandwich bread or soft Italian or French bread, stale or dried in the oven

  • 1/2 cup minced fresh parsley

  • 2 tablespoons minced fresh oregano

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 1 whole bone-in, skin-on turkey breast (about 4 to 5 pounds), patted dry

Directions

  1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and preheat oven to 450°F. In a large Dutch oven, melt 5 tablespoons butter over medium-high heat until foaming subsides (don't allow butter to brown), about 2 minutes. Add sausage and mash with stiff whisk or potato masher to break up into fine pieces (largest pieces should be no greater than 1/4-inch). Cook, stirring frequently until only a few bits of pink remain, about 8 minutes. Add onions, celery, garlic, and sage and cook, stirring frequently, until vegetables are softened, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and add half of chicken stock.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (4)

  2. Whisk remaining chicken stock, eggs, and 3 tablespoons parsley in a medium bowl until hom*ogeneous. Stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, slowly pour egg mixture into sausage mixture. Add bread cubes and fold gently until evenly mixed.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (5)

  3. Using poultry shears, cut off and remove any back portion that may be attached to the turkey (there may not be any). Fill cavity under turkey breast and under flap of fat around neck with stuffing. Transfer remaining stuffing to a buttered 9- by 13-inch baking dish and place turkey on top.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (6)

  4. Using your hands, carefully separate the turkey skin from the meat by inserting at the bottom of the breast, being careful not to tear it. In a small bowl, combine remaining butter with remaining parsley and oregano. Add 1 tablespoon kosher salt and 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper. Stir with a fork until hom*ogenous. Rub mixture evenly over and under turkey skin.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (7)

  5. Transfer to oven and roast until stuffing starts to brown, about 45 minutes. Remove from oven, transfer turkey to a wire rack set in a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet, and return turkey to oven. Continue roasting until turkey is golden brown and crisp, and thickest part near bone registers 145 to 150°F on an instant-read thermometer, about 30 minutes longer. Remove from oven, transfer to a plate, and let rest for 20 minutes.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (8)

  6. Meanwhile, pour exuded juices back over stuffing. Return stuffing to oven and cook until it's golden brown and registers 160°F on an instant read thermometer, about 15 minutes. Carve turkey, spread over stuffing, and serve.

    Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (9)

Special Equipment

9- by 13-inch baking dish

Read More

  • The Food Lab's Definitive Guide to Buying, Prepping, Cooking, and Carving Your Holiday Turkey
Herb-Roasted Turkey Breast and Stuffing Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Do you have to cook stuffing before putting it in the turkey? ›

Give stuffing a head start by heating it up before placing inside the turkey. Like the turkey, stuffing needs to reach the 165 degree mark. If the bird is done before the stuffing, remove stuffing from the cavities and continue to cook in a baking dish.

Should turkey breast be covered or uncovered when roasting? ›

To achieve a perfectly golden, juicy turkey, let the bird spend time both covered and uncovered in the oven. We recommend covering your bird for most of the cooking time to prevent it from drying out; then, during the last 30 minutes or so of cooking, remove the cover so the skin crisps in the hot oven.

Is it better to cook a stuffed turkey at 325 or 350? ›

For the best results, our Test Kitchen recommends cooking a stuffed turkey at 325°F.

How many minutes per pound to cook stuffed turkey? ›

All Your Turkey Questions, Answered
  1. The standard rule of turkey roasting time says 13 minutes per pound for unstuffed birds and 15 minutes per pound for the stuffed ones. ...
  2. If you're more adventurous, there's more than one way to roast a turkey.
Oct 20, 2023

Can you put stuffing in a raw turkey? ›

Fully cook raw meat, poultry, or seafood ingredients before adding to stuffing. Combine the ingredients and place them in your bird immediately before cooking. Don't stuff whole poultry with cooked stuffing. In addition to the turkey, the stuffing's center needs to reach 165 F.

Can you stuff a turkey with uncooked stuffing? ›

Stuffing Safety

Both the turkey and stuffing need to reach a minimal internal temperature of 165°F in order for harmful pathogens in the stuffing to be killed, explains Baker.

Do you put water in the bottom of the roasting pan for turkey? ›

Place roast, skin side up, on a flat roasting rack in 2-inch deep roasting pan. Do not add water to pan. Roast uncovered according to Cooking Schedule or until meat thermometer in center of breast roast reaches 170° F and in center of turkey roast reaches 175° F.

Should turkey breast be room temp before roasting? ›

If your turkey is not close to room temperature when it goes in the oven, it will take longer to cook. If it is at room temp, it may take less time to cook. So, check the temperature of your bird earlier than the full cooking time.

Is 325 too low to cook a turkey? ›

The Slow-and-Steady Method: 325°F

The time it will take depends on how large your turkey is, but the end goal is the same: a temperature reading of 155°F when a meat thermometer is inserted in the thickest portion of the turkey breast.

How many minutes per pound to cook a stuffed turkey at 350? ›

The simplest way to figure out turkey roasting times is to calculate 13 minutes per pound at 350°F for an unstuffed turkey (that's about 3 hours for a 12- to 14-lb. turkey), or 15 minutes per pound for a stuffed turkey.

How long does it take a 15 lb stuffed turkey to cook at 325? ›

If you're determined to stuff the turkey, you'll want to leave it in the oven at 325°F for 20-25 minutes per pound. We'll also recommend covering the turkey (especially the wings and drumsticks) with a loose tent of aluminum foil about halfway through cooking, to keep them from drying out or burning.

How do you know when a stuffed turkey is done? ›

Check these places on your turkey and look for these temperatures:
  1. 180°F in thigh.
  2. 170°F in breast.
  3. 165°F in stuffing.

What is the best temperature to cook a stuffed turkey? ›

A stuffed turkey takes longer to cook than an unstuffed turkey. Roast a stuffed turkey for 15 minutes per pound at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). It is important to check the temperature of the stuffing; it should be 165 degrees F (75 degrees C) when you insert the thermometer into the center of the stuffing.

How long will it take to cook a 15 lb stuffed turkey? ›

Stuffed Turkey

A 15-pound turkey will take 225 minutes (or 3 hours and 45 minutes). Be sure to check that both the stuffing and the turkey reach an internal temperature of at least 165°F to prevent food-borne illness.

Does stuffing need to be cooked? ›

So it absolutely must be fully cooked before being consumed, whether the stuffing has meat in it or not; and. If you're wondering if you can cook the stuffing meat to help it along – yes you can but it won't help. It still gets soaked with raw turkey juices when it's in the oven so it needs to come to 74°C/165°F again.

Why shouldn t you cook stuffing in the cavity of the turkey? ›

Two reasons: It isn't safe. It's difficult to get stuffing inside the turkey up to 165 degrees F and keep it there, and that's the temperature you need in order to kill the bacteria that will inevitably be inside that turkey. Honest to God, it tastes better cooked outside the bird.

Is it better to cook the stuffing inside or outside of the turkey and why? ›

For this reason, many experts recommend baking the stuffing outside the bird, where it can easily be cooked to 165°F and is less likely to harbor bacteria.

Are you supposed to cook stuffing? ›

But stuffing is soft and porous by nature. That's the main reason to cook stuffing inside a turkey: The bread cubes soak up roasting turkey juices and transform into incredible-tasting flavor bombs. That means the stuffing needs to reach a safe temperature (165°), so it won't make you sick.

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