Turkey Breast Tenderloin is the answer to “I want Thanksgiving turkey but I don’t want to wrestle a 15-pound bird.” One tenderloin, 50 minutes in the oven, no carving skills required. You get actual turkey, not sad deli meat, and you’re not eating leftovers until Christmas.
Why This Works for Cooking for One
Turkey breast tenderloins are small (usually 8-24oz), cook fast, and you can buy exactly one. No massive turkey breast, no whole bird, no brining situation. Just season it, roast it, eat it. This makes 1-4 generous servings with maybe a few leftovers for sandwiches, salads or pot pie.
Shopping Smart for Singles
Turkey tenderloin:
- The waste trap: Regular turkey breasts are 3-9 pounds (way too much)
- Better way: Buy ONE tenderloin (8-24oz) from the meat counter. If they only have packages of 2, freeze one for another meal or make both and have turkey for sandwiches
Compound butter ingredients:
- The waste trap: Fresh herbs come in huge bunches
- Better way: See Compound Butter recipe for detailed tips, or use dried herbs (1 tsp dried = 1 tbsp fresh)
The Leftover Chain
After making this, you’ll have:
- Leftover turkey (if any) → Turkey sandwiches, Turkey Pot Pie, Turkey Salad, Turkey Tacos (all coming soon), switch out the chicken for turkey in a Creamy Orange Chicken Salad
- Extra compound butter → Brown Butter Corn, Mashed Potatoes, or freeze in ice cube trays
- Pan drippings → Turkey Gravy (essential!)
If you’re also working through:
- Leftover bacon → Wrap the tenderloin in bacon before roasting
- Extra herbs from Stuffing → Use in the compound butter
- Lemon from another recipe → Slice and roast it alongside the turkey
Coming from another recipe?
- Made Compound Butter? That’s what makes this juicy
- Serve with Stuffing, Mashed Potatoes, Gravy, Brown Butter Corn
Storage Reality Check
- Cooked turkey: 3-4 days in the fridge, sliced or whole
- Uncooked tenderloin: Cook within 1-2 days of purchase, or freeze immediately (lasts 6 months frozen)
- Compound butter: Make it up to 3 days ahead and keep in fridge, or freeze for 3 months
- Turkey with compound butter on it: Can season it the night before and refrigerate
Pro tip: Let the tenderloin sit at room temperature for 20 minutes before roasting. Cold meat from the fridge takes longer to cook and doesn’t cook as evenly.
Make It Your Own
Compound butter variations:
- Rosemary + thyme + garlic (classic)
- Sage + butter + lemon zest (Thanksgiving traditional)
- Garlic + herb + parmesan
- Just garlic butter (simple and good)
- See Compound Butter recipe for ratios
No compound butter?
- Brush with olive oil and season with salt, pepper, garlic powder, herbs
- Use regular butter and sprinkle dried herbs on top
- Italian dressing works as a marinade (really!)
Want to use up other leftovers?
- Bacon → Wrap the tenderloin
- Leftover stuffing → Serve it alongside
- Cranberry sauce from a can → Makes a glaze if you warm it with a little orange juice
Cooking methods:
- Standard: Roast at 375°F for 25-30 minutes
- Fast: Roast at 425°F for 20 minutes
- Slow: Roast at 325°F for 50-60 minutes (more forgiving)
- Pan-sear then roast: Sear in a skillet, finish in oven (extra crispy outside)
Single-Serving Pro Tip
Use a meat thermometer. Turkey tenderloins are small and go from perfect to dry in 5 minutes. Pull it at 160°F (it’ll coast to 165°F while resting). This is the difference between juicy turkey and sad turkey.
Notes:
- Don’t skip the resting—it makes the turkey juicier
- If wrapping in bacon, skip the butter and just season with salt and pepper
- Use up extras: Turkey in Pot Pie, Sandwiches, butter in Corn, Potatoes

Turkey Breast Tenderloin
Ingredients
Instructions
- Place slanted slits in the turkey breast
- Slather with compound butter making sure to get some in the slits
- Bake at 325° for 50-60 minutes until a thermometer reaches 165° in thickest part/center of tenderloin