The 18 Best Thanksgiving Turkey Breast Recipes

- Photo by Chelsea Kyle, Prop Styling by Beatrice Chastka, Food Styling by Anna Stockwell1/18
Turkey for Two With Pan-Sauce Gravy
This easy Thanksgiving breast is just the right amount to serve two with leftovers, or four for dinner.
- Photo by Michael Graydon & Nikole Herriott, Prop Styling by Kalen Kaminski, Food Styling by Rebecca Jurkevich2/18
Dry-Rubbed Turkey Breast
The breast goes into the oven at a relatively high temperature to take on some color, then finishes low and slow for extreme juiciness.
- Photo by Gentl & Hyers3/18
Pastrami-Style Grilled Turkey Breast
Pastrami gets all the good spices. But this Thanksgiving, it's sharing its flavor profile with plain-Jane turkey.
- Photo by Alice Gao, Prop Styling by Alex Brannian, Food Styling by Diana Yen4/18
Stuffed Turkey Breast With Butternut Squash, Kale, and Sausage
This turkey roulade recipe is perfect for a crowd, but is easily halved to feed a smaller crew. Serve a rich gravy alongside.
- Photo by Christopher Testani5/18
Porchetta-Style Roast Turkey Breast
Two words: Crispy! Bacon! In this recipe, turkey breasts get rubbed with spices and herbs before being wrapped in bacon for a second roast in the oven.
- Photo by Shutterstock6/18
Brined Turkey Breast
Brining the turkey breast makes this recipe especially flavorful.
- Rhoda Boone, food styling by Rhoda Boone7/18
Duck-Fat Turkey Breasts with Green Onion Puree
Searing a turkey breast on the stovetop crisps the skin beautifully, while basting with thyme- and garlic-scented duck fat enriches the lean meat.
- Photo by Gentl & Hyers8/18
Boudin Blanc–Stuffed Turkey Breasts with Chestnuts
White meat becomes rich and luxurious with the addition of boudin blanc sausage, white wine, and plenty of butter. This recipe is a little work, but it's a stunner worthy of this special holiday.
- Photo by Ellen Silverman9/18
Collard-and-Prosciutto Chicken Roulades Over Watercress Salad
Make these elegant roulades with turkey breast cutlets instead of chicken. You can ask your butcher for the proper cut if you don't want to cut the turkey breasts yourself.
- Petrina Tinslay10/18
Turkey Breast Stuffed with Italian Sausage and Marsala-Steeped Cranberries
As with biscotti there is an undeniable American-Italian influence at play here but, once again, I embrace this. Actually, though, American-Italian food has had its own influence on the cooking of the Old Country: these days, I am reliably informed by my Italian publisher and celebrated food writer, Csaba dalla Zorza, you can find dried cranberries with relative ease in Italy.
The true Italian Christmas dinner is very much about the capon. Yes, you can find capons outside of Italy, although not everyone can quite cope with the idea of eating a castrated cockerel. Many understandably view old-school caponization with distaste, although it is considered ethically acceptable if the rooster has been chemically rather than surgically castrated. I don't know about you, but the idea of eating meat that has been flooded with the types of hormones necessarily involved here gives me the willies.
Besides, my Christmas Dinner is my Christmas Dinner: unchanging, ritualistic, an intrinsic part of me. When in Rome, and all that, but if I'm cooking at home, I don't fiddle with my time-honored menu. I'm not going to give an evangelical tub-thump about my turkey brining techniques, as I've done enough of that in the past, but I am still open to other ways of celebrating the Big Bird and this recipe is a case in point. For me, it is perfect for any sort of seasonal supper party, but really comes into its own on a buffet table, as it carves fantastically and is as good (maybe even better) cold than hot, so you can make it in advance and then be the world's most unharried host on the night.
You need to go to a butcher to get a while breast joint and you need to ask for it to be butterflied and boned and make sure the skin is left on.
I know it might sound a bit of a faff, but take it from me that stuffing a while double breast joint is very much easier than stuffing and rolling a single breast joint, as is more commonly found in supermarkets. Basically, all you're doing here is opening out your boneless turkey joint, smothering it with stuffing, and folding it over. What you end up with, for all the ease of its creation, is nothing short of a showstopper.
- Photo by Marcus Nilsson11/18
Butter-Roasted Turkey Breasts
So rich and decadent, but so simple, this recipe is heaven for white-meat lovers.
- Photo by Lara Ferroni12/18
Citrus-Sage Roast Turkey Breast With Gravy for a Small Crowd
One great reason to serve turkey breast instead of the whole bird? It's better for a small crowd. The combination of citrus and sage here will put you in full holiday mode.
- Photo by Bobbi Lin13/18
Bourbon and Brown Sugar Glazed Turkey
Separate cooking techniques for breast and legs in this recipe ensure that the different cuts reach their most delicious potential. Of course, you can just skip the legs and just stick to the turkey breast.
- Michael Graydon and Nicole Herriott14/18
Brined Roast Turkey Breast with Confit Legs
Cooking the breast and the legs separately means no more dry bird! The breast gets brined overnight before it is roasted. Just ask your butcher to remove the legs and thighs for you—or get twice the amount of turkey breasts.
- José Picayo15/18
Roast Turkey Breast with Potatoes, Green Beans, and Mustard Pan Sauce
This single recipe makes a complete Thanksgiving meal, perfect for a smaller gathering.
- Lara Ferroni16/18
Roasted Turkey Breast with Corn Bread-Sage Stuffing and Brandy Gravy
Roasting bone-in turkey breast by itself is the number one way to fix the classic Thanksgiving conundrum: How to keep the breast meat from drying out while the dark meat continues to cook. This breast meat is perfectly tender, with crisp, salty skin.
- Tom Schierlitz17/18
Achiote-Grilled Turkey Breast with Tomatoes, Chiles, and Mint
Turkey is native to Mexico, so these tomatoes, chiles, and mint make a natural paring for those who are tired of the typical holiday flavor profile.
- Sang An18/18
Turkey Breast Stuffed with Matzo and Fennel
This dish is a perfect marriage of Italian and American holiday traditions—feel free to substitute regular cubed bread for the matzo.