Ultimate Herb Roasted Turkey Breast Recipe: Golden Done in 90 Minutes

Key takeaways
  • Apply herb butter under and over the skin for deeply seasoned, juicy meat and crackling golden skin.
  • Start at 425°F for 20 minutes, then roast at 325°F until 165°F; use an instant-read thermometer and rest 15 minutes.
  • Use a bone-in, skin-on 5 to 7 pound breast for 4 to 6 people; herb butter can be made up to 3 days ahead.

This herb roasted turkey breast recipe gives you everything you want from a holiday centerpiece: shatteringly crispy golden skin, deeply seasoned meat that stays genuinely juicy, and a pan full of drippings begging to be turned into gravy. No brining required, no complicated technique, and it’s on the table in about 90 minutes.

Overhead view of sliced herb roasted turkey breast on a rustic wood carving board, golden crackling skin glistening with pan drippings, fresh rosemary and thyme scattered alongside in warm holiday light — juicy double herb butter turkey breast recipe, perfect for a small Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner.

5 Reasons This Will Become Your Go-To Holiday Centerpiece

  • Make-ahead friendly: herb butter can be prepped up to 3 days in advance
  • Perfect for smaller gatherings of 4 to 6 people without a whole bird commitment
  • The double-application herb butter seasons from the inside out, not just the surface
  • High-heat blast at the start locks in moisture and builds crackling golden skin
  • White wine in the pan keeps the meat humid and creates built-in pan drippings for gravy

How Herb Roasted Turkey Breast Became My Holiday Non-Negotiable

For years, I made whole turkeys for Thanksgiving out of obligation. They took up the oven for hours, the legs were always done before the breast, and I inevitably served either overcooked white meat or undercooked dark meat, never both exactly right at the same time.

The year I switched to a bone-in turkey breast only, my family stopped complaining and started asking for seconds. A bone-in breast cooks more evenly, takes a fraction of the time, and, this is the part nobody talks about, the bones add flavor and help conduct heat toward the center of the meat so it cooks more gently from the inside. The skin is also entirely yours to work with: no drumsticks, no wings, just one glorious stretch of skin to get perfectly crispy.

The technique that changed everything was applying herb butter both under the skin and over it. Butter under the skin flavors the meat directly as it roasts. Butter over the skin crisps and browns as it hits the hot oven air. One application gets you seasoned skin. Two applications gets you seasoned, juicy meat with crackling skin. That difference is the entire recipe.

What You’ll Need

  • Bone-in, skin-on turkey breast, 5 to 7 lbs. This is the ideal size for 4 to 6 people. Bone-in keeps the meat juicier and more flavorful than boneless; skin-on is non-negotiable for the crust. Thaw completely in the refrigerator before roasting: allow 24 hours of thaw time per 5 lbs of turkey.
  • Unsalted butter, softened. Room temperature is essential here. Cold butter tears the delicate skin instead of spreading smoothly under it. Pull the butter out of the fridge at least an hour before you plan to start.
  • Fresh herbs: rosemary, thyme, and sage. These three are the classic Thanksgiving trio. Fresh makes a meaningfully better crust than dried. If you must use dried, use one-third the amount called for, as dried herbs are significantly more concentrated.

According to the USDA FSIS safe temperature chart, all poultry must reach a minimum internal temperature of 165°F at the thickest part of the breast, away from the bone, to be safe to eat. A reliable instant-read thermometer is the single most important tool in this recipe.

How to Make Herb Roasted Turkey Breast

The method has three distinct stages: the herb butter prep, the high-heat blast, and the lower-heat finish. Each stage serves a specific purpose and cannot be swapped or skipped without affecting the result.

The herb butter takes about 5 minutes to make and can be done up to 3 days ahead. Getting it under the skin without tearing it is the only fiddly part of the whole recipe: work your fingers in slowly from the neck end, moving gently in small circles, and the skin will loosen easily without any tearing.

The high-heat start, 425°F for the first 20 minutes, is what builds that golden crackling crust. Then you drop the temperature to 325°F and roast low and slow until the internal temperature reaches 165°F. This two-temperature method gives you bakery-window skin and meat that stays juicy all the way to the center.

Rest time is not optional. Fifteen minutes under a loose foil tent after the oven is the step most people skip and most home cooks regret. The juices are still in motion when the turkey comes out of the oven. Resting lets them redistribute back through the meat so every slice is moist rather than watching the juices pool on the cutting board.

Tips for the Best Results

Dry the skin before buttering. Pat the turkey completely dry with paper towels before applying any butter. Moisture on the skin creates steam, and steam is the enemy of crispiness.

Season generously. Turkey breast is a large, thick cut of meat. What feels like too much salt on the surface is exactly the right amount once it works its way through the roast during cooking.

Tent with foil only if the skin browns too fast. Check the color at the 45-minute mark. If the skin is already deep golden before the meat is done, lay a loose sheet of foil over the top and continue roasting. Remove it for the last 10 minutes to re-crisp.

What to Serve With Herb Roasted Turkey Breast

This turkey is a natural centerpiece alongside classic holiday sides. For a herb-forward roasted dinner pairing that requires zero oven space, our Rosemary Crock Pot Chicken Thighs uses the slow cooker so your oven stays free for the turkey and sides, and it shares the same rosemary-forward flavor profile that makes the whole table smell like a holiday.

Make-Ahead and Storage

Make ahead: The herb butter can be made up to 3 days ahead and refrigerated in a sealed container. You can also apply the butter to the turkey breast up to 24 hours in advance and refrigerate uncovered on a rack, this helps dry out the skin even further for a crispier result on roasting day.

Storage: Carve and refrigerate leftover turkey in an airtight container for up to 4 days. For longer storage, slice and freeze in a single layer, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 3 months. Reheat slices in a 300°F oven covered with foil and a splash of broth for about 20 minutes.

FAQs

How long does it take to roast a bone-in turkey breast?

Plan for approximately 20 minutes per pound at 325°F after the initial high-heat blast, but always rely on a meat thermometer rather than time alone. A 6-pound breast typically takes about 1 hour 45 minutes total. Start checking the internal temperature at the 1-hour 20-minute mark to avoid overcooking.

Do I need to brine the turkey breast?

Not for this recipe. The herb butter applied directly to the meat, combined with the white wine steam in the pan, keeps the turkey juicy without brining. If you have time and want to brine anyway, a simple overnight dry brine of 1 tsp of kosher salt per pound rubbed all over the exterior (then left uncovered in the fridge) works beautifully and intensifies the flavor.

How do I know when the herb roasted turkey breast is done?

Insert an instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the breast, angled away from the bone. When it reads 165°F, the turkey is done. Pull it from the oven, tent loosely with foil, and rest for a minimum of 15 minutes before carving.

Herb Roasted Turkey Breast Recipe Card

Herb Roasted Turkey Breast Recipe

Recipe by Soukayna
0.0 from 0 votes
Course: DinnerCuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Easy
Servings

6

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

1

hour 

30

minutes
Calories

420

kcal

A bone-in, skin-on turkey breast coated in a double-application garlic and herb butter, roasted with a high-heat blast for crackling golden skin and a low-heat finish for deeply juicy, perfectly seasoned white meat.

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Ingredients

  • 1 bone-in skin-on turkey breast, 5 to 7 lbs, fully thawed and patted completely dry

  • 0.5 cup unsalted butter, softened to room temperature (1 full stick)

  • 4 garlic cloves, minced or pressed through a garlic press

  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary leaves, finely chopped

  • 1 tbsp fresh thyme leaves, finely chopped

  • 1 tbsp fresh sage leaves, finely chopped

  • 1 tsp lemon zest (from about half a lemon)

  • 1.5 tsp kosher salt, divided

  • 0.5 tsp black pepper

  • 1 tbsp olive oil

  • 0.5 cup dry white wine (or low-sodium chicken stock)

Directions

  • Remove the turkey breast from the refrigerator 45 to 60 minutes before roasting and set it on a roasting rack inside a roasting pan or rimmed sheet pan, this rest at room temperature promotes more even cooking and a juicier final result.
  • Preheat your oven to 425°F (220°C) and position the rack in the lower third of the oven, which gives the turkey breast better air circulation and ensures the bottom of the pan heats evenly.
  • In a small bowl, combine the softened butter, minced garlic, chopped rosemary, thyme, sage, lemon zest, 1 tsp of the kosher salt, and all the black pepper, then mash and stir everything together with a fork until completely combined into a fragrant green-flecked herb butter.
  • Working carefully at the neck end of the turkey breast, slide your fingers gently under the skin and work them slowly toward the thicker center of the breast, loosening the skin from the meat in small circular motions without tearing it, the skin should loosen easily with patient, gentle pressure.
  • Take half of the herb butter and spread it directly onto the meat under the skin, using your fingers to push it as far and as evenly as possible across the surface of the breast so that every bite of meat will be seasoned and basted as it roasts.
  • Rub the remaining herb butter all over the outside of the skin, covering the top, sides, and as much of the underside as you can reach, then drizzle the olive oil over everything and sprinkle the remaining 0.5 tsp of kosher salt evenly over the skin.
  • Pour the dry white wine into the bottom of the roasting pan — not over the turkey, but into the pan itself — which creates a gentle humid environment in the oven that prevents the meat from drying out during the long roast.
  • Slide the roasting pan into the preheated 425°F oven and roast at this high heat for exactly 20 minutes, during which time the skin will begin to turn golden and start to blister slightly — this is exactly what you want, as this stage builds the crust.
  • After 20 minutes, reduce the oven temperature to 325°F (165°C) without opening the door more than necessary, and continue roasting for approximately 60 to 70 more minutes, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the breast (angled away from the bone) reads 165°F — begin checking at the 60-minute mark to avoid overcooking.
  • If the skin begins to brown too deeply before the meat reaches temperature, lay a loose sheet of aluminum foil over the top of the breast and continue roasting, then remove the foil for the final 10 minutes of cooking to re-crisp the skin.
  • Once the turkey reaches 165°F, remove it from the oven and let it rest, uncovered or loosely tented with foil, on the roasting rack for a full 15 minutes before carving, this step allows the juices to redistribute throughout the meat, and skipping it is the single most common reason turkey breast comes out dry.
  • Carve the turkey breast by slicing along one side of the breastbone, following the curve of the bone, then slice the removed breast meat against the grain into 0.5-inch thick slices and serve immediately with the pan drippings spooned over the top.

Notes

  • Storage: Refrigerate carved turkey in an airtight container for up to 4 days. Reheat at 300°F covered with foil and a splash of broth for 20 minutes.
  • Substitution: Dried herbs can replace fresh at one-third the quantity (e.g., 1 tsp dried rosemary for 1 tbsp fresh). Chicken stock replaces white wine 1:1.
  • Equipment: A roasting pan with a rack is strongly recommended. An instant-read thermometer is essential.
    Serving size: Plan for 0.75 to 1 lb of bone-in turkey breast per person.

Nutrition Facts

  • Fat: 22g
  • Cholesterol: 165mg
  • Carbohydrates: 1g
  • Protein: 52g
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I hope this herb roasted turkey breast earns a permanent spot on your holiday table and, honestly, on your regular weeknight rotation too. Turkey breast is wildly underused outside of November, and this recipe proves it deserves year-round attention. If you make it, drop a comment below and let me know how it went, or tag us on Instagram. I especially love seeing the pan drippings you made with the juices.

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