The star of many holiday feasts, a beautifully roasted turkey can feel like a make-or-break for hosts. With all eyes on the bird as it makes its dramatic entrance to the table, you want to make sure it’s as moist, flavorful and impressive as possible. But is taking the extra step to brine your turkey really worth it?
As a long-time food blogger with years of Thanksgiving turkey trials under my belt I’ve experimented extensively with brining. And I can definitively say – yes, brining is absolutely worth the small amount of extra effort. Here’s why.
What Exactly is Brining?
For those unfamiliar, brining is the process of soaking meat in a saltwater solution prior to cooking. The salt in the brine seasons the meat and helps it retain moisture. While you can brine all kinds of proteins, it’s especially useful for lean meats like turkey breast which can easily dry out during roasting.
There are two main methods of brining
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Wet brining – Soaking the raw turkey in a saltwater solution for 4-24 hours. The saltwater solution often contains other flavorings like sugar, spices and herbs.
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Dry brining – Rubbing the raw turkey all over with salt and letting it rest in the fridge uncovered for 1-3 days. The salt draws moisture out of the turkey initially but that moisture gets reabsorbed along with the salt.
Both techniques deliver tasty, foolproof results. But for most home cooks on a holiday timeline, wet brining is simpler since it doesn’t require as much advance planning.
3 Key Benefits of Brining Your Bird
After years of testing, I keep coming back to brining because it consistently delivers three major benefits:
1. Boosts moisture
Brining helps turkey retain much more moisture during roasting. Studies show brined turkeys can retain 30-40% more moisture than unbrined birds. The salt dissolves some of the muscle proteins, allowing the turkey breast to absorb more liquid. Plus that absorbed moisture stays locked in, even after cooking.
2. Prevents drying out
Because brined turkey retains so much extra moisture, it’s much more forgiving in the oven. Even if you accidentally let it roast a bit too long, it will still be juicy and delicious. The salt acts as an insurance policy against overcooking.
And a brine is a really great way, even if you go a few degrees over your desired cooking temperature, if you forget the turkey in the oven for some reason [to help avoid over-cooking]. You have a much greater range where you’re still going to have moist, delicious meat because that salt is in there.
3. Infuses flavor
A brine provides the perfect opportunity to add extra flavor to your turkey. Salt alone will drastically improve the flavor. But you can also add aromatics like citrus, herbs, spices, garlic and onion to the brine liquid. As the turkey soaks, those flavors get absorbed into the meat, taking your turkey’s flavor profile up a notch.
Wet Brining vs Dry Brining – Which is Best?
After years of conducting my own side-by-side tests of wet and dry brined turkeys, I’ve concluded that wet brining consistently delivers the best results for home cooks.
Though dry brining can work wonderfully in skilled hands, it’s harder to get perfect results without precision and practice. Here’s how the two methods compare:
Wet brining
- Super simple method
- Allows brining up to 24 hours
- Infuses lots of moisture
- Provides opportunity to add flavor
- Requires a large vessel
Dry brining
- Requires planning 2-3 days ahead
- Relies on precise salt measurement
- Can over-cure meat if too much salt is used
- Provides opportunity to add flavor
- Takes up space in the fridge
For most home cooks making turkey once or twice a year, wet brining is the easiest route to big flavor and guaranteed moisture. And unlike dry brining, it’s nearly impossible to over-salt the turkey with a wet brine. I like to keep my wet brines to a 6-8% salt-to-water ratio which provides a safety net against over-salting.
The beauty of wet brining is you can toss a turkey in a saltwater bath the night before roasting, and wake up to a perfectly seasoned, super juicy bird ready for the oven. It takes the guesswork out of the equation.
Step-By-Step Guide to Wet Brining Your Turkey
Brining a turkey is simple but does require a bit of planning ahead. Here is a step-by-step guide to wet brining success:
1. Make the brine
A basic brine is just water and salt but you can add lots of flavor with aromatics. Bring 1 gallon of water to a boil, remove from heat and stir in:
- 1/2 cup kosher salt
- 1/2 cup brown sugar
- Herbs (rosemary, thyme, sage, etc)
- Spices (peppercorns, allspice, cinnamon, etc)
- Citrus zest and/or juice
Let cool completely before using.
2. Submerge the turkey
Place your thawed, raw turkey in a large container. Pour the cooled brine over the turkey until completely submerged. If needed, weigh down with a plate to keep fully immersed.
Cover and refrigerate for 8-24 hours, flipping turkey halfway through. The longer it brines, the more seasoned it will be.
3. Rinse and roast
After brining, fully rinse the turkey under cool water. Pat dry thoroughly with paper towels, inside and out. Discard used brine.
Roast the turkey as you normally would, following your favorite roasting method. The brined turkey can be used in any roasting recipe.
And that’s it – you’ll have the most flavorful and foolproof turkey you’ve ever tasted!
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you brine a frozen turkey?
Yes, as long as you give the turkey ample time to fully thaw in the brine before roasting. Estimate 24 hours of thawing for every 4-5 pounds.
Can you brine an already brined turkey?
You should not brine a turkey that has already been brined by the producer (read your package carefully!). This will over-salt the meat. Opt for natural or organic turkeys if you want to brine at home.
How long can you store a brined turkey?
Once brined, the turkey should be roasted within 2 days for food safety. The raw turkey and brine can also be frozen together for longer storage.
What does brining do to turkey flavor?
Brining boosts and seasons the natural flavor of the turkey rather than masking it. The salt enhances the savory umami flavors while aromatics provide subtle background notes.
What kind of container should you use to brine a turkey?
Choose a non-reactive container large enough to fully submerge the turkey with plenty of brine. Food-safe plastic buckets work great. Avoid reactive metals like aluminum.
Can you over-brine a turkey?
It is possible to over-brine, resulting in an overly salty bird. Keep your brine salt ratio moderate (6-8% salt to water). And do not brine for longer than 24 hours unless the bird is very large (over 18 lbs).
The Verdict: Try It Once and You’ll Be Hooked
While brining requires a bit more work than simply throwing a turkey in the oven, it delivers such proven, foolproof results that it’s absolutely worth it. With minimal hands-on time, brining gives you the insurance policy you need for a perfectly juicy, flavorsome holiday turkey with no guesswork involved.
Once you try a brined turkey, I guarantee you’ll never make an unbrined bird again! The difference in flavor and moisture is remarkable. So do yourself a favor and add brining to your holiday meal arsenal. Your guests will be glad you did.
The Problems With Brining
There are two major problems with brining. First off, its a major pain in the butt. Not only does it require that you have a vessel big enough to submerge an entire turkey (common options are a cooler, a big bucket, or a couple of layers of heavy-duty garbage bag, tied together with hopes and prayers against breakage), but it requires that you keep everything inside it—the turkey and the brine—cold for the entire process. For an extra-large bird, this can be a couple of days, meaning that youve either given up using the main compartment of your fridge at the time of year that you most want to use it, or that you keep a constant supply of ice packs or ice rotating to keep that bird cold.
“brining robs your bird of flavor”
Second, brining robs your bird of flavor. Think about it: Your turkey is absorbing water, and holding on to it. That means that that extra 30 to 40% savings in moisture loss doesnt really come in the form of turkey juices—its plain old tap water. Many folks who eat brined birds have that very complaint: Its juicy, but the juice is watery.
Ive seen a number of solutions (solutions, get it? haha) offered for this problem, so I decided to test them all out side by side.
Brining Alternatives
By far the most common alternative is plain old salting. When you salt a turkey (or chicken) breast, meat juices are initially drawn out through the process of osmosis (yes, this time it really is osmosis at work). As the salt dissolves in these juices, it forms what amounts to a very concentrated brine, which then allows it to break down muscle proteins. The loosened muscle fibers allow the juices to get reabsorbed, this time taking the salt along for the ride.
Through this process—osmosis, dissolving, reabsorbing—the salt will slowly work its way into the meat.
Ive also heard people ask the very obvious question: If brining introduces bland, boring tap water into the bird, why not brine in a more flavorful solution?
Why not, indeed? I decided to find out.
With so many methods to test side by side, it became impractical to try to roast turkey breasts simultaneously. Instead, I roasted 24 chicken breasts in four different batches of six, averaging out the data across the batches. While chicken is not exactly turkey, the two are similar enough that results for one should correlate to results for the other.
Heres what I tried:
- Breast #1: plain (untreated)
- Breast #2: brined overnight in a 6% salt solution
- Breast #3: heavily salted overnight
- Breast #4: brined overnight in chicken broth with a 6% salt content
- Breast #5: brined overnight in cider with a 6% salt content
- Breast #6: soaked overnight in plain water
Breasts #1 and #6 were included as a control to ensure that the brine and salt solutions were behaving as expected, as well as a means of evaluating how closely the data would mirror that of the turkey breasts.
Heres what happened with breasts #1, #2, #3, and #6 (plain, brined, salted, and water-soaked).
As expected, the brined chicken breasts held on to significantly more moisture than either the plain chicken breasts or the water-soaked chicken breasts. Indeed, in this test, the water-soaked breasts actually ended up drier on average than the plain breasts. Take a look at the carnage:
Dry as the Gobi Desert (on an admittedly very-moist-for-a-desert day).
On the other hand, take a look at the brined breast:
As plump and juicy as a benevolent aunt in a Disney film. Tasting it, you definitely feel a case of wet-sponge syndrome. Water comes out of it as you chew, giving you the illusion of juiciness, but the texture is a little too loose, and the flavor a little bland.
Moving on to the salted breast, we find that its still significantly moister than the unsalted breast (though it was a couple of percentage points drier than the brined breast). Tasting it, youll find its undoubtedly juicier and better-seasoned, with a stronger chicken flavor. Texture-wise, its significantly different from both plain and brined turkey, with the smooth, dense-but-tender texture of lightly cured meat.
Visually, you can see clear signs of this curing with its decidedly pink hue:
With a small chicken breast, this pink, moist, cured section extends nearly to the center of the breast. On a turkey, youd see it only around the outer edges (which, serendipitously, happen to be the parts most prone to overcooking and drying out anyway).
While the brined breast was slightly juicier, flavor-wise and texture-wise, Id take the salted chicken over the brined any day.