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It’s finally time for Turkey Talk!! I LOVE this herb and butter roasted turkey with white wine pan gravy.

Like November is here! I have only been waiting for this day since like, the beginning of August! I am such a freak, I mean who starts thinking about the holidays in the heat of the summer? Basically what I’m trying to say is that this post has been a long time coming.
While everybody was enjoying all the things that go along with October, I was roasting turkeys, mashing potatoes and eating Thanksgiving dinner. Or well, at least towards the end of October I was. I try to be on top of things, but then somehow I always fail.
UGH.
But hey! I got the turkey made and um, I am pretty dang happy with it. I mean, come on. Doesn’t it look perfect?!?!
It is!!

Ok, so here’s the deal. When it comes to the holidays, I am all about traditional. I love traditions and to be honest, I don’t like breaking them. That said, I do love to switch little things up just a little with things like side dishes and desserts. But the turkey?
The turkey has to be classic. Herbs and butter. Nothing fancy, nothing overdone. Just classic, simple and delicious flavors.

For as long as I can remember, my mom has always cooked the Thanksgiving bird. Even last year, she cooked the turkey. She is a good turkey roaster and we had a good thing going. I’d do the sides + desserts + apps and she handled the turkey…although last year, I do recall that she and my dad were out hiking for most the time the turkey was cooking leaving me to tend to it.
Actually, as I recall, she and dad were still hiking when people began arriving for dinner. Typical.
Anyway, I love my mom’s classic turkey, so I took inspiration from her, read a whole bunch online and then made some turkeys (yup plural, and I still have three more to make between now and Christmas). And you guys, I swear by this turkey you see here today.
It’s perfection and I could not be more excited about it.

As you can read from the title, Herb and Butter Roasted Turkey with White Wine Pan Gravy, my turkey is simple and traditional. Pretty sure it doesn’t get much more classic than this.
Just the way I like it.
The secret to my turkey is a butter soaked cheesecloth. I read about this method of cooking the bird in this month’s Food and Wine. The second I read about it, I knew I had to try it. It’s flipping genius!
You soak a layer of cheesecloth in melted butter (mine is full of fresh thyme, sage, parsley and lemon zest!) and then drape the butter soaked cheesecloth over the bird. Then you roast the turkey with the cheesecloth ON the bird. The cloth protects the skin from burning all while basting the turkey with butter the entire time it roasts.
Genius I tell you, and the skin comes out perfect, the meat is incredibly moist and the flavor is spot on! You do not even need to tent the bird with foil, the butter soaked cheesecloth works magic guys and it could not be easier.
Soo the gravy though?!? My mom has alway has always had trouble with gravy. Like it was either clumpy, too thin or flavorless. I get it, gravy can be hard, but this pan gravy will make your life simple. Nothing too tricky and it gets made in the very same pan you roast the turkey in. Hello less dishes – YES!
Plus, the flavor is out of this world. It’s all about those pan drippings. 🙂

So are you excited yet?? Are you going to start planning Thanksgiving? It’s T-minus twenty days away and I have then next couple weeks packed with my personal Thanksgiving menu. Think sweet taters, pies, cookies, mashers, casseroles, salad, bread and the works. I may even throw a few drinks your way this holiday season too.
Wait, question: are we into drinks? Like cocktails? With booze? Let me know.
It’s gonna be a really good November. But since Turkey is the star of the show, I figured I would start there.
Next up are the apps, sides, desserts and a couple easy dinners too (you know cause we all gotta eat between now and the big day – duh!).
YUM. Did you break out the stretchy pants yet, cause I think it may be time. I am full-force (like intensely so) in all holiday GO mode, so excited!

SIDE NOTE: My dad asked, since we had turkey in October, if that meant we could skip it at Thanksgiving. I practically looked at him like he was insane. I mean, what??!? Who skips the turkey on Thanksgiving? Guys, he is out of his mind I tell ya. Like losing it BIG TIME.
Or he’s just a giant Scrooge, thinking a combo of both actually.

Nutritional information is only an estimate. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site is not guaranteed.

That picture? It makes you happy and excited, right?? I know, me too!!
Hi! So excited to try this recipe. I was curious if the all-clad large stainless steel roasting pan with rack that we are planning to use, would be ok to use with an 11lb turkey or does a large roasting pan for a small turkey result in burning the juices? Any tips are appreciated! Thanks so much for your awesome recipes!
Hey Melanie,
That should be totally fine to use! I hope you love the recipe, Happy Thanksgiving! xTieghan
Do you need to put the turkey on a rack?
Hey Katie,
If you have a rack I would use it, if not no worries. I hope you love the recipe, Happy Thanksgiving! xTieghan
Would this cheesecloth method work with a bone-in turkey breast instead of the whole bird? I’m only cooking for 2 people so we’re opting for just the breast.
Hey Lilly,
I would follow this recipe:
Butter Roasted Turkey Breasts
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 60 minutes
Serves: 6
2 skin on, bone in turkey breasts (about 4-5 pounds total)
1 stick (1/2 cup) salted butter
1/3 cup mixed chopped fresh herbs, such as thyme, sage, and parsley
zest of 1 lemon
kosher salt and black pepper
1 head garlic, skin left on and head cut in half horizontally
4 shallots, halved
1 cup white wine
1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
2. In a small bowl, combine the butter, herbs, lemon zest, and a pinch each of salt and pepper.
3. Gently loosen skin from the turkey breasts. Rub butter under the skin and all over the outside of breasts. Season with salt and pepper.
4. Arrange the thyme sprigs, garlic, and shallots in large roasting pan and then place the turkey breasts, skin side up, on top. Roast turkey breasts, rotating halfway through, until skin is crisp and golden brown and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of breasts registers 160 degrees F., about 45–55 minutes.
5. Transfer turkey breasts to a platter or cutting board and let rest 10 minutes. Carve and serve the turkey breasts with pan drippings and roasted shallots.
I hope you love the recipe, Happy Thanksgiving! xTieghan
Hi!
I am a turkey newbie and am probably going to have to use a foil roasting pan to do the job this year. That being the case, do you have any suggestions when it comes to the gravy part? Should I just make it in another pot on the stove with the drippings and wine and broth? Or is there a way I can still get the brown bit up from the bottom of the aluminum pan and into my gravy?
Thanks! So excited to try this recipe for my first turkey!
Hey Rachel,
I would just make it all on the stove top in another pot. I hope you love the recipe, Happy Thanksgiving! xTieghan
I’m so excited to try this recipe!! We are from South Africa and this is the first turkey I will be cooking ever!! Eeek! I was wondering, when the recipe says to baste the turkey during the cooking time, do I do that on top of the cheesecloth or do I lift the cheesecloth to baste the turkey?
Hey Denise,
You will do this over the cheesecloth. I hope you love the recipe, Happy Thanksgiving! xTieghan
First time turkey cooker here. I’m confident because your recipes have never failed me!
Can I follow this recipe if I’m cooking a bone in breast and not a whole turkey?
I’m gonna try this Turkey this year! How would you adjust these times and temps for an 18 pound Turkey?
Made this recipe last year and loved it! Wondering if I’m doing a 23lb turkey if I need to adjust the recipe and make more butter etc? Thanks!!
Hi there! First time making the turkey at thanksgiving, so just want to make sure I get it right—do I cook the Turkey directly sitting in the roasting pan with the broth poured around it or do I roast the turkey on a turkey rack within the roasting pan (so that the broth is in the pan just below the turkey)I’m not sure if this makes sense but I wasn’t sure which to do based on the photos! Any help is much appreciated. Thanks!
When you remove it, that umami laden cheesecloth and stir it around in your broth ! It will vastly improve and enrich the gravy you make!
Have you ever made this with the turkey filled with stuffing? If so did you have the change the cooking time or oven temp? I can’t wait to try it!
I made this today for an early Thanksgiving lunch and it was absolutely amazing!!!! It was so juicy and the skin perfectly crispy!!! It was the best Turkey I have ever had!! My family all raved about it! Thank you so much!!! This is now my go-to Turkey recipe!
Any thoughts on adding vegetables (Carrots, celery, onions, etc) underneath the rack? I’ve seen other folks do this with roasting turkeys, but wondering if that will change the flavor of the gravy?
I really want to try this, but I have an electric oven that runs hot. I’m nervous that the cheesecloth with burn up or smoke a lot. Any advice? Also, will this work with a brined turkey?
If I have a 10-12 pound turkey will this affect the oven time or temp? Thank you!!