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Roasted Turkey Roulade Recipe (Stuffed Turkey Roll)

Roasted Turkey Roulade is a delicious dinner alternative to cooking a whole turkey. This easy turkey roll recipe is the perfect blend of sweet and savory flavors. Wow your guests with this make-ahead Turkey Roulade Recipe.

This recipe was originally posted in 2015 and has been updated to improve reader experience.

Top down view of a slice of turkey roulade swirled with dressing on a white plate. The whole turkey roll it the first slices removed is in the background.

Roasted Turkey Roulade is the perfect Holiday meal. Your guests will be wowed by this culinary beauty.

We love that making this turkey roll recipe takes care of the turkey and stuffing without any tedious carving.

It’s impressive to look at and maybe looks a little intimidating to make, however, it isn’t difficult at all! We’ll show you how!

Our turkey roll is savory with just a touch of sweetness and this recipe makes enough extra stuffing that no one will leave your table hungry!

What is a Turkey Roulade?

A roulade is a technique in which ingredients are rolled. This recipe consists of homemade stuffing rolled into a boneless turkey breast. Boneless Turkey Roll is another name for this recipe.

Front view of a sliced turkey roulade on a white platter garnished with sage and rosemary.

Why we love a Roulade

  • A much more manageable size making serving easier.
    • It also makes freezing much easier. To freeze we slice the roulade into serving-sized pieces and then lay them flat in between pieces of plastic wrap, foil, or waxed paper placed in a resealable storage bag or foil.
  • They cook much quicker! Eliminating the bone speeds up the cooking.
    • That leaves you with more oven time over the holidays!
  • You can stuff them with your favorite stuffing recipe.
    • Other filling ideas include wild rice or quinoa.

Once you try this technique, you’ll be hooked! We are, just take a look at our Lamb Roulade and our Pork Roulade!

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Ingredients

Top down photo of the ingredients used in a turkey roulade recipe including ground pork, onions, dried cranberries, butter, celery, bread cubes, pine nuts, egg, turkey stock, brandy, fresh rosemary and sage.
Turkey Roulade Ingredients
  • Turkey breast – Boneless and butterflied (see the note below)
  • Onions – We used yellow onions but use your favorite
  • Celery
  • Butter – We used unsalted. If you use salted, just adjust your seasoning to use less
  • Bread Cubes – I use pre-seasoned cubes. Use what you like, purchased, or homemade.
  • Pine nuts – you can substitute with another chopped nut or leave them out.
  • Turkey or chicken stock – Purchased or make your own. I explain how below.
  • Dried cranberries – Craisins
  • Brandy – A non-alcoholic substitute would be apple juice
  • Egg – We use large eggs
  • Fresh herbs – sage and rosemary. Thyme would be another great addition.

Butterflying Technique

The turkey breast is made up of two sides of meat separated by the breast bone.

Butterflied Turkey Breast laying skin side down.
  • When you remove the breast bone, you can flatten the breast.
    • The meat will resemble two ovals of meat joined together by the underlying skin.
  • We don’t pound the meat to the same thickness. Where it was thicker, we sliced it to an even thickness and put the sliced pieces of meat over the skin that attached both sides of the breast meat. This created more of a rectangle shape which allowed us to roll the turkey breast evenly.

Note: When you buy a turkey breast make sure it’s the actual turkey breast. Some turkey breasts sold by your grocer are just made of turkey breast meat pieces and will not roll out.

Also, if it’s an actual turkey breast, look at the size. The boneless turkey breasts in the store can often include just one side and are under 2 pounds.

They will work but you’ll have a smaller turkey roll and a lot more dressing than you need. Our turkey breast was 5 pounds.

Tips for stuffing a Turkey Roulade

Two photo grid showing how to stuff a turkey roulade with homemade stuffing and rolling it.
  1. With the skin side down, apply a 1/2-inch thick layer of the stuffing to the meat side.
    • Leave 1/2-inch from the edge. Otherwise, the stuffing will just ooze out the sides. If it does, just stuff it back in.
  2. Roll the turkey breast as firmly as you can without losing all the filling and secure the turkey roll by tieing it with kitchen twine.
    • A second pair of hands can be very helpful for holding it together while you tie it.
    • Place the turkey breast seam side down over a baking rack sitting over a baking sheet or roasting pan.
    • Baste with butter and season with salt and pepper.
  3. Bake.

Note: We were careful not to touch the spoon we used to apply the stuffing with the raw turkey meat so our bowl of stuffing was never contaminated with the raw poultry. We just spooned the stuffing onto the meat and spread it out with a spatula.

If you’re baking the dressing right away, that wouldn’t be an issue. However, if you plan on freezing the dressing unbaked, you wouldn’t want any food safety concerns.

Top down view of a slice of turkey roulade swirled with dressing on a white plate. The whole turkey roll it the first slices removed is in the background.

How to make homemade Turkey Stock

It’s cheaper to buy an entire turkey and remove the breast yourself. That leaves you with all of those flavorful bones and any parts you don’t routinely bake anyway.

To make homemade turkey stock, put the bones in a large saucepan. I cut out the backbone, breast bone, and had the giblets and neck bone that were in the cavity of the turkey.

  1. Cover the bones and any additional pieces mentioned above with water. Additionally, you can add onion, celery, and carrots for additional flavor.
  2. Bring to a low boil and then add salt, pepper, and optionally additional herbs, dry or fresh. Turn to a simmer and cook for about 2 hours.
  3. After the simmer is complete, you can pour the stock through a strainer or just spoon out the bones and any additions you’ve made.
    • I skim off any cooked herbs or cooked pieces but don’t cool and remove the fat. The fat in your homemade turkey stock adds flavor to the stuffing or makes amazing homemade gravy.
    • Any leftover stock can be frozen.

If you have your butcher butterfly your turkey breast make sure to tell them that you want the bones.

Proper cooking tips

Two photo grid of a rolled and tied turkey roulade being basted with melted butter and seasoned with salt and pepper.

We placed our Turkey Roulade seam side down on a rack placed over a baking sheet. We brushed the skin with melted butter before placing it in the oven and basted it again about 20 minutes before it was fully cooked.

That keeps the skin supple and browns it beautifully. We didn’t have to cover it but if your turkey starts to get too dark, you can tent a piece of aluminum foil over the top.

You can cook your Turkey Roll on the grill. Use indirect heat which actually just turns your grill into an oven. This allows you to free up the oven for other dishes.

The most important thing when cooking any poultry is that it’s cooked to the proper temperature to ensure no foodborne illnesses arise.

The CDC states turkey can be removed from the oven when it reaches an internal temperature of 165°F.

Since the meat is butterflied we don’t have any bones to worry about. That makes it easier to get a good temperature reading with an instant-read thermometer.

We allow our turkey to rest for 15 to 20 minutes before slicing it. We allow any meat we cook to rest. That assures the juices can be reabsorbed making a juicy result.

A top down view of a bowl of stuffing.

This recipe will make more stuffing than what is needed for the turkey roll.

Leftover stuffing can be baked in a buttered dish for 40 to 45 minutes. Cover the stuffing with a lid or aluminum foil for the first 20 minutes and remove the covering for the remaining 20 minutes until browned.

Leftover dressing can also be frozen baked or unbaked in a covered airtight container.

Our favorite side dishes

As we stated, one of the good things about this recipe is you don’t need a lot of additional dishes to go with it. Here are a few of our favorites.

A front view of an uncut turkey roll tied with twine and cooled to a golden brown on a white platter garnished with fresh sage and rosemary.

Some of our favorite Turkey Recipes

We love turkey! You can find all of our Turkey Recipes here.

I hope you enjoyed this delicious recipe as much as we do. Drop me a comment below, and don’t forget to give it a star rating. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐. Your comments and ratings help others decide if this recipe is for them too.

angled photo of a slice of turkey roulade stuffed with a swirl of stuffing on a white plate next to a rosemary garnish.

Roasted Turkey Roulade

Author: Hostess At Heart
A Turkey Roulade is delicious alternative to cooking a whole turkey. This turkey roll recipe is the perfect blend of sweet and savory.
5 from 9 votes
Prep Time 45 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Resting 20 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 35 minutes
Course Dinner
Cuisine American
Keyword: Roasted Turkey, Roasted Turkey Roulade, Roulade, Turkey Roll
Servings: 12

Ingredients
  

  • 3/4 cup dried cranberries
  • 1/2 cup Brandy or Calvados or Apple Juice
  • 4 tbsp butter unsalted
  • 2 onions (medium) chopped
  • 3 stalks celery 1/2-inch-diced
  • 1 pound pork sausage ground
  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh sage chopped
  • 1/4 cup pine nuts toasted
  • 12 oz cubed herb-seasoned stuffing mix
  • 2 cups chicken stock * or turkey stock
  • 1 extra-large egg beaten
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 5 lb Turkey Breast – 2 halves turkey breast, boned and butterflied (5 pounds) – Have your butcher do this.
  • 3 tbsp butter unsalted, melted

Instructions
 

Stuffing

  • Add the pinenuts to a small pan and cook over medium heat, stirring frequently. Watch very carefully because they will brown very quickly. Remove them from the pan once toasted so they stop browning.
  • Put the dried cranberries in a small saucepan with the Brandy and 1/2 cup water. Bring the mixture to a boil over medium heat, then lower the heat to simmer for 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside.
  • Put the stuffing mix and turkey or chicken stock in a large bowl.
  • Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onions and celery and saute until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the sausage, crumbling it into small bits, and saute until cooked and browned. Add the cranberries with the liquid, rosemary, sage, and pine nuts, and cook for 2 more minutes.
  • Add the sausage mixture, egg, 1 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper to the stuffing mix and stir well.
  • Preheat the oven or grill to 325 degrees F.

Assemble

  • Lay the butterflied turkey breast skin side down on a cutting board. Sprinkle the meat with 2 teaspoons salt and 1 teaspoon pepper. Spread the stuffing in a 1/2-inch-thick layer over the meat, leaving a half-inch border on all sides. Don't mound the stuffing or the turkey will be more difficult to roll.
  • Cut several long pieces of kitchen twine. Starting at 1 end, roll the turkey like a jelly roll and tuck in any stuffing that tries to escape on the sides. Don't use over-firm pressure or you will lose your stuffing. Tie the roast firmly with kitchen twine every 2 inches to make a compact cylinder. This is easier with an extra person to tie while one holds the roll together.
  • Place the stuffed turkey breast seam side down on a rack placed in a sheet pan. Brush with the melted butter, sprinkle generously with salt and pepper, and roast for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, or until an instant-read thermometer registers 165 degrees F in the center. (I test in a few places after 1 1/4 hours.) Remove the turkey roll from the oven and cover the turkey with aluminum foil. Allow it to rest at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Carve 1/2-inch-thick slices and serve warm.

Video

Notes

Recipe adapted from Ina Garten, Food Network.
*You can make your own homemade turkey stock by covering turkey bones with water and simmering on the stovetop for 2 hours. We season our stock with salt and pepper. You can optionally add fresh onion, carrots, celery, and herbs for additional flavor.
For grilling, place a rack in a cast iron dutch oven and grill uncovered.

Nutrition

Serving: 12gCalories: 569kcalCarbohydrates: 32gProtein: 52gFat: 24gSaturated Fat: 9gCholesterol: 162mgSodium: 1159mgPotassium: 741mgFiber: 2gSugar: 9gVitamin A: 348IUVitamin C: 2mgCalcium: 74mgIron: 3mg

Nutritional Disclaimer

This recipe was calculated using the exact brands and measurements I used to make this recipe. If you are following a strict diet please note changing anything will cause the nutritional info to change. My calculations are intended as a guide only.

Tried this recipe?Let me know how it was!

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Two photo collage of a 3/4 angled view of a slice of turkey roulade showing a stuffing swirl garnished with rosemary on a white plate. over an uncooked turkey roll being basted with melted butter.
5 from 9 votes
Recipe Rating




Dave

Monday 11th of November 2024

I think 165 is too high of a temp to pull out if it going to rest for 20 to 30 minutes. I would think internal temperature would rise 10 degrees or more. Any thoughts?

Julie Menghini

Tuesday 12th of November 2024

I'm not saying you're incorrect. We've always cooked turkey to 165 and then let it rest. There's nothing to say it will rise 10 degrees. I would be comfortable removing at 160 because it could easily rise 5 degrees. There are some that say you're fine pulling it at 155. You can check it at a 10 minute rest and see where it's at. Ultimately you want it to come to 165. What it comes down to is what you're comfortable with. I appreciate your comment, Dave and if you pull it at 155 or 160 please stop back and let us know what your experience is. ~ Julie

Amy Nash

Wednesday 11th of November 2020

The step-by-step photos and video were so helpful! This turned out really incredibly delicious and I have never made a roulade before of any sort!

Julie Menghini

Wednesday 11th of November 2020

Thank you, Amy! So glad that you enjoyed it. We love it too!

Michele

Monday 9th of November 2020

Your directions were perfect! I made this over the weekend to rave reviews! Definitely a keeper

Julie Menghini

Monday 9th of November 2020

Thank you, Michele!

MICHAELA KENKEL

Monday 9th of November 2020

I had a small Friendsgiving gathering yesterday and I made this instead of the traditional bird. It was a giant hit! Everyone wanted the recipe! Thank you so much!

Julie Menghini

Monday 9th of November 2020

I love Friendsgiving! I'm glad everyone enjoyed it!

Debi

Sunday 8th of November 2020

This is exactly how we make out turkey. Well, the stuffing is different. All the work on the front end, and when it's done it's so much easier.

Julie Menghini

Monday 9th of November 2020

That's the great thing, Debi, you can use your favorite stuffing.

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