Oven-roasted, flavorful, and juicy herb-roasted turkey legs for days when a whole turkey is just too much food or you are cooking for a smaller party. Includes a simple brine, that's not overly salty that will keep your turkey drumsticks moist and juicy!
Table of Contents
When I came up with this herb-roasted turkey leg recipe, I thought about what the holidays meant to me and how the holidays are not always going to be huge family gatherings for everyone.
There are a lot of single or households of 2 (like ourselves) that want to enjoy turkey during the holidays but having a whole turkey is not very practical because it's a lot of food!
In situations like these, why not cook the turkey in smaller portions right? Especially since it would be guaranteed to be tender and juicy because we're using dark meat!
But being dark meat is not enough for it to stay juicy and tender, the secret is you need to brine it in a salt solution.
If you're looking to use turkey thighs instead, I also have a recipe for Easy Oven Roasted Turkey Thighs with Coffee Rub that you may enjoy!
This roasted turkey legs recipe is not limited to just special occasions but because of its long cooking time, they also make awesome small Sunday dinners as well in place of roasts 🙂
Ingredients for Herb Roasted Turkey Legs
- Turkey Legs - I like to use the turkey drumsticks for this recipe, but you can definitely use the thigh or breast as well. You can also substitute chicken in place of the turkey legs as well but you will need to adjust the cooking time and cook it for less time.
Turkey Leg Marinade
- Light soy sauce - I use light or low sodium soy sauce for this turkey leg marinade.
- Dark soy sauce - Dark soy sauce is syrupy and usually less salty than regular or light soy sauce. It is mainly used to give the meat some color. If you can't find it, you can use regular soy sauce instead but it won't have that dark color.
- Herb Glaze - For the herbs, you can basically combo any of your favorite green herbs for this recipe but try not to overdo it on the really strong flavored ones like dill. I have not tried using fresh herbs for this since fresh herbs are expensive in the winter and my herb garden decided it wanted to give up on me this year. I will update the recipe when I can get a hold of fresh herbs again. I put lemongrass in this herb mixture for additional flavor, this is optional but I HIGHLY recommend using it if you can get your hand on it.
Turkey Brine Ingredients
For this roasted turkey legs recipe, I kept the brine somewhat simple and used salt, water, bay leaves, garlic, and black cardamom.
You can omit the black cardamom for the brine without a big difference in flavor but I highly recommend keeping in the garlic and bay leaves.
How to Make Turkey Juicy, Tender, and Flavorful
Whenever I cook any type of poultry (or lean meats like pork chops), I like to use a brine.
It's a little more work but well worth the effort because it makes the meat juicier and tender by using the salt to draw the water into the meat - food science!
You should always brine meat overnight.
When you are working with salt and brining, it is also very easy to overdo it which can make meats very salty.
Through trial and error, I found my sweet spot is 3 tablespoons of salt with 8-9 cups of water.
Go with 8 cups of water if you prefer saltier meat, go with 9 cups of water for less salty meat.
What to Serve with This Roasted Turkey Leg
I love to serve these with my easy pan-fried honey soy brussels sprouts, garlic fried rice (sinangag) or honey miso garlic roasted potatoes.
This turkey also goes very well with my Korean Glass Noodle Stir Fry (Japchae) as well!
More Oven-Roasted Recipes You May Like
- Oven Roasted Five Spice Peking Chicken
- Sweet and Spicy Honey Sriracha Chicken
- Sweet and Spicy Coca Cola Ribs
- Easy Oven Roasted Turkey Thighs with Coffee Rub
More Turkey Recipes You May Like
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Recipe Card
Herb Roasted Turkey Legs
Joyce's Recipe Notes
- The dark soy is used to give the turkey a bit of colour and a bit of sodium. If you do not have it, you can use regular soy sauce.
- The herb glaze can be doubled or tripled with no issues if you would like to use this on a whole turkey! 🙂
- I like to use the turkey drum for this recipe, but you can definitely use the thigh or breast as well. You can also substitute chicken in place of the turkey legs as well but you will need to adjust the cooking time and cook it for less time.
Ingredients
- 4 turkey legs
Turkey Brine
- 3 tablespoons salt
- 8 cups water
- 3-4 bay leaves
- 4-5 garlic cloves (roughly crushed)
- 2 black cardamom (optional)
Herb Glaze
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce (light or low sodium)
- ½ tablespoon dark soy sauce
- ½ onion
- 2 tablespoons oil (to make the onion paste)
- ¼ cup unsalted butter
- ¼ cup oil (any oil except olive oil)
- 1 teaspoon lemongrass
- 1 teaspoon thyme
- 1 teaspoon tarragon
- 1 teaspoon rosemary
- ½ teaspoon oregano
- ½ teaspoon dill
- ½ teaspoon basil
Instructions
Brining the Turkey
- In a large bowl, combine the water and salt together and stir until the salt has dissolved
- Add in the the bay leaves, crushed garlic cloves and black cardamoms (optional)
- Add in the turkey legs and brine it for 24 hours in the fridge.
Making the Herb Glaze
- In a food processor, blitz half an onion with 2 tablespoons of oil until it becomes a paste. (If you don't have a food processor, you can grate the onion instead)
- Melt the butter and combine the onion paste, ¼ cup of oil, soy sauces, and herbs into 1 bowl and mix well. Set aside for later to glaze the turkey. (Note: the glaze may thicken, as the butter cools - not to worry, it will melt back into a oil once you brush it on the hot turkey!)
Roasting the Turkey
- Pre-heat the oven to 350F (177C)
- Use a roasting pan and put a rack in it to suspend the turkey, so there is air flow between the pan and the bottom of the turkey. If you don't have a rack, you can take tin foil and roughly press it together to create a rough and bumpy texture and place the turkey legs on top so it is not sitting completely flat against the roasting pan.
- Once the oven is up to temperature, place the turkey legs in the oven and set the timer for 30 minutes
- Once 30 minutes is up, we can start to glaze the turkey with the herb glaze every 15-20 minutes
- The turkey legs should take between 1 hour and 30 minutes to 1 hour and 45 minutes but use a meat thermometer to be sure. My oven doesn't run very hot, so yours may take less time to fully cook.The internal temperature should be 165F (74C). When you cut into the turkey, the juices should be clear and not bloody.
- Enjoy! 🙂
Nutrition
*Nutritional information is calculated using online tools and is an estimate*
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Nijole says
Today I made according to this recipe.It is amazing.This is the most delicious turkey, according to this recipe.Thank you very much
Joyce Lee says
Hi Nijole!
I am so happy this turned out for you and you liked it!! I am very happy to share!
Mike says
I've yet to make this recipe, so I've given it a 5 as a placeholder. But, I do want to know if the legs can be set atop potato chunks instead of a rack or foil while roasting, and if they are to be covered for all or some of that oven time.
Joyce Lee says
Hi Mike,
I have not tested it with potatoes on the bottom instead of a rack, but I don't see why this would not work. The only difference I can see is, the potatoes might steam the turkey but that's not necessarily a bad thing. As for covering it, I personally don't think that will be an issue as long as you remove the foil cover for the glazing. The only thing I might be concerned about is, the foiling might cook the turkey at a hotter temperature and it might overcook it an make it rubbery/tough.
Hope you enjoyed this.
Eileen Haney says
I'm not very visually oriented, and don't look at pictures much. So I was using this recipe for whole Turkey legs. Not just drumsticks. It worked fine AFTER I made a second batch of brine, and doubled the rest of the recipe. So if you're cooking legs (thigh and drumstick) double the recipe, or use half as many legs. AND I cut them into two pieces each, thigh and drumstick, to keep the roasting time the same.
Julia says
This one sounds great, considering it for Christmas eve. Just to make sure, all of the spices are dried in this recipe, even the lemongrass? Thanks in advance
Joyce says
Hi Julia!
The only spice that is not dried on that list is the lemongrass. I used frozen pre-grounded lemongrass, you can usually be found at an Asian grocery store in the frozen section.
Dried lemongrass come in a few forms, some are powdery and some are cut into tiny pieces but dried and it looks like this (https://www.amazon.com/Lemongrass-cut-Dried-Herb-Oz/dp/B004624SXI). If you find the ones that are dried up into tiny pieces, I would re-constitute it with a 1/2 teaspoon of warm water before using it. If you find the powdery dried form, then I would use half the amount since I find those ones a bit on the stronger side.
Alternatively, if you have access to fresh lemongrass, this will also work very well - just make sure you ground it up or chop it very finely.
Hope this helps 🙂
Hope you have a great Christmas with lots of yums!
Joyce
heather (delicious not gorgeous) says
have you seen those massive turkey legs from disneyland? these remind me of those (though maybe it's because i just associate turkey legs in general with disneyland), but these sound a lot less like a salt bomb and lot more herby/juicy/AWESOME.
Joyce says
Yes I have! haha This was inspired from that! I definitely was working to make sure they aren't smoky salt bombs haha! I actually make this same recipe (minus the brining) with chicken and it works just as good (if not better!) Something to do when turkey is not around!
Josie says
Yummy !! I always love your creation of cooking recipes --- the ' pupswithchopsticks ' styles. Attraction photos and simple ingredients, I will serve this roasted turkey legs dish to my family in this X'mas holidays !
Great !
romain | glebekitchen says
I love roasted turkey parts. Do it all the time. Usually I go thighs but these turkey legs look absolutely phenomenal. The lemongrass and soy are a nice pupswithchopsticks twist and the black cardamom in the brine must give it that nice smoky background flavour. Can't wait to try this one out!