How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

We’ve written about frying turkey, spatchcocking it, roasting it, thawing it, even smoking a whole turkey. But what if you want turkey and don’t have half a platoon of eaters coming over for Thanksgiving? Easy. Smoke some turkey breast.

Smoking just the breasts of a turkey is a fantastic way to cook that lean and tender muscle. There’s no mucking about with dark meat/lighte meat temperature differences, there’s just cooking one thing very well. Whether you want an easier way to do turkey at Thanksgiving or you just want a delicious dinner that will result in tasty leftover sandwiches, smoked turkey breast is a great way to go.

Let’s take a look at the tools, temps, and method (adapted from MeatChurch.com) for fantastic smoke-roasted turkey breast.

Challenges for a perfect smoked turkey breast, and how to face them

Turkey breast is chronically overcooked. Why? Because it’s so low in fat and connective tissue. The meat goes from perfectly cooked to overcooked in a matter of a few degrees, and there’s no forcing the lost moisture back into the meat.

This drying-out problem is exacerbated by the breast’s geometry: that long, thin tail is likely to overcook before the thick center is done. So even if you get one part of it done perfectly, another part probably won’t be great.

Well, those are not insurmountable problems. In fact, a little thermal thinking and a little science can get us to a place with pretty much perfect breast meat.

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

Smoked turkey breast temperature

First, let’s get right to the thermal meat of the matter: if you want juicy turkey breast, you can’t overcook it. While it is common practice to cook poultry to 165°F (74°C) “for food safety,” you can achieve the same bacterial kill-off levels at lower temps held for longer times. In fact, skinless turkey breast reaches the same kill-off at only 157°F (69°C) in only 47.9 seconds. It will have the same safety at 155°F (68°C) in 1.2 minutes! Every degree you shave off of the final temp (as long as you stay within the food-safe range) saves you more and more moisture within the turkey breast, so don’t cook it all the way up to 165°F (74°C)! Use your Smoke X2™ to monitor the temps throughout the cook and pull out your trusty Thermapen® ONE to verify the temp once the alarm on the Smoke X2 sounds.

Final internal temps are important, of course. But they are only half the story. You need to consider your smoker temp, as well. If your smoker is at 425°F (218°C) when you reach 157°F (69°C) in the thermal center, the meat around that thermal center will be well overcooked. And the carryover cooking will ensure that the thermal center also gets overcooked! Cooking a tender piece of meat like this at a lower, gentle temperature is the way to go. We went with Matt Pittman’s advice and cooked ours at 275°F (135°C). At that temp, the thermal gradients between the surface and the center remain relatively small.

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

Brining turkey for temperature protection

Brining meat does more than make it salty. When proteins interact with salt, they denature in a way that prevents them from scrunching up and squeezing out their water when cooked. Bathing turkey breasts in a salt bath for 3–6 hours will work especially well on the outermost parts of the meat, which also happen to be the parts taht overcook and dry out the most. By using salt as a thermal defense solution, we can get turkey that is more perfectly done throughout, not just in the very center.

A basic brine of 1 cup of kosher salt per gallon of water (you can also add a half-cup of sugar if you like) is great for this purpose. We aren’t brining for deep flavor so much as we are brining for texture, but, if you want more flavor, add it!

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

Seasoning a smoked turkey breast

How you season your turkey is up to you (I like something with a little sweet and a little heat, but lots and lots of paprika for color), but no matter how you decide to season it, you need it to stick to the bird while you cook it. For that, we employ a binder: mayo.

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven
You can see the tenders are separated and seasoned. Cook them stacked underneath the thin part of the breast.

Yep. Apply a thin coat of good-ol’ mayonnaise to you turkey breasts before seasoning, and you’ll get better adhesion and better “bark.” The proteins in the mayo act as a simple glue when they heat up, binding with the spices. But beware! Use too much mayo and it will melt and slough off the surface of the bird, taking your seasonings with it, before the proteins have the chance to firm up. You really just need a thin, scraped-on coating.

A note on buying turkey breasts

This recipe call for boneless, skinless breasts, an item that is not readily available at every grocery store. But you can often find a breast roast that is just a bone-in breast pair. We bought one of those and cut the breast meat off of the partial carcass, then pulled their skins off. If you want something particularly tasty, render that skin gently and cook it until it becomes crispy like bacon.


If you try this recipe, you’ll certainly want to make it again. Why not make it up this weekend? You can call it practice for Thanksgiving, and you’ll get some wicked good sandwich meat in the bargain. By keeping an eye on critical temps and giving thermal care to the cook, you can make juicy, amazing smoked turkey that you and your whole family will love. Let us know how it goes!

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Description

Boneless smoked turkey breasts, adapted from a recipe found on MeatChurch.com


  • 2 boneless, skinless turkey breast halves
  • 2 Tbsp mayonnaise
  • BBQ rub or another seasoning
  • 1 C kosher salt
  • 1/2 C sugar (optional)
  • Other brine ingredients, optional (we used a half bottle of hot sauce)

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven


Brine the meat

  • Combine the cup of kosher salt (and the sugar if using) with one gallon of water. Stir to combine until all the salt is dissolved. 
  • Place the breasts in the brine and put the brine in the refrigerator for 3–6 hours. 

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

Cook the turkey

  • As the meat approaches the end of its brining time, preheat your smoker to 275°F (135°C). If using Billows™ BBQ Control Fan, set the fan-control channel on your Smoke X2 for that temp. 
  • Remove the meat from the brine and discard the brine. 
  • Pat the meat dry with paper towels.
  • Smear the mayo onto the surface of the meat, scraping it with a gloved finger so that only a bare coat remains. 
  • Season the breasts on both sides with your favorite poultry rub. 

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

  • Place the turkey in the smoker and probe a breast with your Smoke X2. Set the high-temp alarm for 157°F (69°C).

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

  • Smoke until the high-temp alarm sounds on your meat channel. 
  • How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven
  • Use your Thermapen ONE to verify that 157°F (69°C) is the lowest temp you can find in the meat. 

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

  • Remove the meat from the smoker and let it rest for a few minutes before carving in. 
  • Slice it up and serve it!

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

Note: only slice as much as you will eat. The leftovers are better if you let the breast cool as a chunk then slice the meat for sandwiches off of that chunk. Slicing it all when hot, then cooling it will yield drier sandwich meat. 



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How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

How to smoke a turkey breast in the oven

How long do you cook a smoked turkey in the oven?

Set bagged turkey into a 9x13-inch baking pan. Bake in the preheated oven for 1 hour. Reduce heat to 250 degrees F (120 degrees C). Bake until turkey comes easily off the bone and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh should read 165 degrees F (74 degrees C), about 6 hours.

How long does it take to smoke turkey breast?

Smoke turkey, maintaining temperature inside smoker between 225° and 250°, for 3 1/2 to 4 hours or until a meat thermometer inserted into thickest portion registers 165°. Remove turkey, cover loosely with aluminum foil, and let stand 10 to 15 minutes before slicing.

Do you wrap a turkey breast when smoking?

Place the turkey, skin side up (meaning, the side that formerly had skin), in the smoker and cook until golden brown (typically 2 ½ to 3 hours). Remove the turkey from the smoker, place the butter on top of the turkey, and wrap tightly in two layers of heavy-duty aluminum foil, dull side out.

How long does it take to smoke a turkey breast at 350?

This should take about 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to medium-low and adjust burners, as needed, to keep the grill's internal temperature between 325°F-350°The total cooking time could be 1½-2½ hours. The turkey is done when the internal temperature of the turkey registers 162°F-163°F on an instant-read thermometer.