Miraculously Delicious Turkey Burgers (Moist! Juicy! Flavorful!)
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Made without any egg, bread crumbs, oil, or mayonnaise, these turkey burgers remain moist and juicy when cooked and are so incredibly flavorful! They take no time to throw together and they’ve become a favorite family weeknight meal for their ease and deliciousness.

This turkey burger recipe comes from Mindy Kaling, who credits Oprah Winfrey with the recipe.
The recipe was unlike any turkey burger recipe I had seen: blend an apple, cilantro, scallions, mango chutney, soy sauce, and a few other seasonings in a food processor, mix the herby-spiced purée with the ground turkey, then form and grill the patties.
The recipe did not call for eggs, bread crumbs, mayonnaise, or oil, ingredients so often included in turkey burger recipes to prevent the patties from being dry, which turkey burgers can be due to the leanness of the meat.
But these burgers were not at all dry. They were moist, juicy, and oh-so-flavorful! They soon became a frequently requested meal by my children, which I happily honored, given their ease and deliciousness. Something I love about the recipe is that the shaped patties can be stored in the fridge for 3 to 4 days before being cooked as needed.
How to Make Turkey Burgers, Step by Step
Gather your ingredients:

The only potentially hard ingredient you need is the mango chutney. I found this brand at my co-op, and I’ve been really liking it. I’m sure whatever brand you can find will be great:

You’ll also need ground turkey. I look for dark meat ground turkey (as opposed to leaner ground turkey made with from the breasts), but use what you like/can find:

Combine the seasonings in a food processor:

Then purée until smooth:

Pour the sauce over the ground turkey meat:

Then mix with your hands to combine:

Lightly oil a 1/2 cup dry measuring cup, then use it to scoop the mixture into 8 portions:

Using lightly oiled hands, shape each portion into a burger shape — the mixture is very wet/moist:

At this point you can cover the burgers and transfer to the fridge (for as long as 3 to 4 days) or you can cook them right away. I love the convenience of making them ahead — I’ve been placing four burgers each on two dinner plates; then tucking each plate into a ziptop bag and placing in the fridge until I need them. When ready, cook as many as you need in a grill pan for roughly 8 minutes total flipping after 3 to 4 minutes. Alternatively, you can broil the burgers for 8 minutes, flipping after 4 (see recipe box for more details).

You also could grill them, which is how we made them last summer, using a grill mat, for fear of grilling the delicate patties directly on the grates:

The original recipe calls for a pretzel bun, but you could use anything you like: English muffins, brioche buns, etc. Real talk: during the week, I’m buying the buns.


So juicy, so flavorful, so good!

Miraculously Delicious Turkey Burgers
- Total Time: 28 minutes
- Yield: 8 burgers 1x
Description
Made without any egg, bread crumbs, oil, or mayonnaise, these turkey burgers remain moist and juicy when cooked and are so incredibly flavorful! They take no time to throw together and they’ve become a favorite family weeknight meal for their ease and deliciousness.
Notes
I’ve adapted the recipe from this one featured on Katie Couric Media. The original recipe is credited to Chef Taryn of the Kismet Table and was popularized by both Oprah Winfrey and Mindy Kaling.
The original recipe called for 1.5 pounds of ground turkey, so I’ve scaled the recipe up to call for 2 pounds of ground turkey, and I’ve made a few other teensy changes:
- I love this Burlap and Barrel garlic powder, so I use 2 teaspoons of it in place of the fresh garlic. Use what you wish. If you do use garlic powder, make sure it’s salt free otherwise the burgers may be too salty.
- To ensure the burgers are not too spicy for the kids, I use regular chili powder in place of chipotle chili powder. Again, use what you wish.
Other Cooking Methods:
- The original recipe calls for using a heavy skillet, preferably cast iron. I have not tried this.
- To broil: Preheat your broiler with a rack on the highest shelf for at least 15 minutes. Lightly oil a small sheet pan or a sizzle pan with neutral oil. Place however many burgers you want to cook on the pan. Broil for 4 minutes. Flip. Broil for 4 minutes more.
- To Grill Outdoors: These burgers, in their uncooked state, are very moist and slightly difficult to handle — I would worry that they might stick to an outdoor grill or get very mangled in the process. When I have grilled them outdoors, I used one of these grill mats, which worked great. See photo above.
- I have never used a thermometer for these burgers, but if you wish to, an inserted thermometer should register 165°F. This is my favorite instant-read thermometer.
Ingredients
For the burgers:
- 1/3 cup roughly chopped fresh cilantro (about 1.5 ounces)
- 3 tablespoons mango chutney
- 1 tablespoon + 1.5 teaspoons soy sauce or tamari
- 1½ teaspoons kosher salt (Diamond Crystal Brand, use half as much if using Morton)
- 1 teaspoon curry powder
- 1 teaspoon chili powder
- 2 teaspoons garlic powder, see notes above, or 3 garlic cloves, grated
- 1 small honey crisp coarsely chopped (4 to 5 ounces post chopping)
- 4 scallions, coarsely chopped
- 2 pounds ground dark-meat turkey
- neutral oil of choice (grapeseed, organic canola oil, avocado oil)
For serving:
Instructions
-
Process cilantro, mango chutney, soy sauce, salt, curry powder, chili powder, garlic, apple, and scallions in a food processor until smooth, 1 to 2 minutes, stopping to scrape sides as needed.
-
Combine apple mixture and turkey in a large bowl, and mix with hands until thoroughly combined.
-
Lightly oil a 1/2 cup dry measuring cup (inside and out), then use it to scoop the mixture into 8 portions. You can place the portions on a parchment-lined sheet pan or onto two dinner plates (4 portions on each plate… I like the dinner plate option, because I can tuck the entire plate into a ziptop bag and store each in the fridge until I need them.) Using lightly oiled hands, pat and shape each portion into a burger shape — the mixture will be very wet/mushy. At this point you can cover the burgers and transfer them to the fridge (for as long as 3 days), or you can cook them right away.
-
Heat a large grill pan over medium to medium-high heat. (See notes above re other cooking methods such as using an outdoor grill or the broiler.) Add 1 tablespoon of oil, and brush to coat; add patties — they should sizzle when they hit the pan. Cook for 8 minutes total. I like to flip after 3 to 4 minutes — the burgers will be lightly charred… this is OK. Cook for another 3 to 4 minutes on the other side. Flip again if necessary once or twice at the end. My burgers consistently are done in 8 minutes but err on the side of over-cooking them — they are forgiving and you want them to be cooked all the way through. Remove the burgers from the pan, and let rest on a plate for 4 to 5 minutes. Note: The burgers will continue to cook as they rest. And as noted above, I have never used a thermometer for these burgers, but if you wish to, an inserted thermometer should register 165°F.
-
Meanwhile, toast the buns and pull out any and all condiments. Assemble your burgers and enjoy.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 8 minutes
- Category: Dinner
- Method: stovetop
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
107 Comments on “Miraculously Delicious Turkey Burgers (Moist! Juicy! Flavorful!)”
Turned into these by your newsletter last Summer, I made them and couldn’t believe how delicious they were! We’ve made and shared them with family at numerous bbqs since. I really appreciate the scaled up version here to refer to, as I was winging what .33 extra of each ingredient looked like! 😂
So nice to hear this, Amanda!! Thanks so much for writing. I have made these for friends as well and everyone is always astounded by their flavor — and they require very few fixins’… no cheese, etc. Hope all is well. xo
This looks delicious! Can the uncooked burgers be frozen?
I would imagine! Next time I make them, which will be soon, I’ll freeze one patty and update the blog once I cook it off 🙂
Is there a substitute for mango chutney? I’m sure it adds much flavor but I’m sugar free. I am searching for a sugar free one.
Hi Lisa! I’m not sure I have a sugar-free substitute for you… my suggestion would be apricot jam, but that obviously will contain sugar.
I found a recipe to make low sugar or sugar free mango chutney and for someone with a mango allergy, you can substitute apples or another fruit such as peaches.
Any possible substitute for mango chutney? Allergy issue. Thanks
I feel like an apricot jam might work well here.
I used Bonne Maman apricot jam and it worked great – so delicious!
Great to hear, Louisa! Thanks for circling back and sharing this. We made these last night… I love turkey burger night!!
Can this be frozen raw. We are only 2 people.
I have not yet tried freezing the uncooked patties, but I will report back as soon as I do!
I love the way this recipe is healthy and sounds delicious! BUT there are only two of us! Can I freeze these uncooked patties or how can I scale the recipe down so we can use it? Thanks!
The recipe can easily be halved! I have not yet tried freezing the uncooked patties, but I will report back as soon as I do 🙂
Made these tonight. Took twice as long to broil as the recipe stated. That said, they were delicious. The Indian flavors were not as pronounced as I had thought they’d be (granted I love my tzatziki and tomatoes!)
There are only two of us. I halved it and made 4 burgers. I think it would freeze ok. But I cooked all four, we ate two and we eat the other two sometime this week.
Is there a substitute for apple (allergy issue)? Where do you get mango chutney?
I found the mango chutney right at my little coop and I imagine most supermarkets carry it — look in the international aisle or ask someone if you can’t find it… I’m sure it’s hiding somewhere!
Are you allergic to pears?
Interested is the Radish Raita you mentioned. Recipe?
I was loosely following a recipe from a cookbook that in sum was a mix of:
whole milk yogurt
ground cumin
red onion
shredded radish (using the shredder attachment of the food processor)
salt
chopped serrano
chopped mint
I added some fresh lemon juice and a tiny amount of honey to taste because I found it a little bland and bitter… but it was my own doing bc I wasn’t following the recipe. If I find a raita recipe I love, I will circle back here and post it 🙂
Thank you. Made the burgers and they were delicious. I do think getting fresh ground turkey makes a difference. The “tube” turkey can be very wet.
I’m so happy to hear this! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes. I’m about to add some notes as well 🙂
This recipe was disgusting. I made 4 burgers and threw out two. I followed the recipe. The taste of the turkey was beyond mushy and didn’t firm up when pan seared. I’m so disappointed.
Bummer to hear this! My only thought is that you didn’t cook them long enough. They should be completely cooked through, and they are very forgiving, so I’d err on the side of over-cooking them. I’ll add some notes to the recipe now. They definitely firm up when they cook but they are still very moist/juicy. Sorry to hear this one didn’t work out for you.
This sounds delicious, but one of the photos reminded me of pesto. I can manage cilantro, but am extremely pesto averse. Does this taste of pesto, or is it just an overreaction on my part to the photo? (I’m sure you love all these weird questions – I make mine with my apologies).
It doesn’t taste like pesto at all! Go for it. Not weird at all 🙂
This is a very delicious burger. The apparently odd collection of ingredients yield a very satisfying, flavorful and moist burger with none of the ingredients leaping out at you. The mango chutney was found at the Hannaford’s in Latham. I substituted ground chicken for turkey because that is what I had. But this is a Keeper, which in my recipe folder is rare.
Thank you again, Ali!
So nice to read this Butch! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes. Great to hear it worked well with ground chicken. I will try that next 🙂
So delicious! This is the first recipe for turkey burgers that I actually love to eat!
So nice to hear this, Carol! Thanks for writing. And same for me 🙂
Made these last night, and they were delicious! Sarah and I both thought it would make a great meatloaf as well. May have to try that next.
So nice to hear this, Mike! Love the idea of turning this into a meatloaf — I’ll try that next, too. And great to hear from you. Hope all is well! Ben says hi 🙂
I just finished putting together the meat mixture and mildly concerned I’ve done something wrong – your mixture appears green hued in the photos, and the burgers appear the same, but my mixture was more of a reddish color (likely the color of the chili powder). Did I use the wrong thing? Eeeep!!
I’m sure they will be fine! Maybe you used a redder apple, too, in addition to a different chili powder? My fingers are crossed that they turn out well 🙂
Made this recipe tonight and it was a huge hit! Who knew turkey could be so flavorful and delicious? I would not tweak a darn thing. Followed your recipe and pan fried them in my Hexclad pan. Thank you for yet another great recipe!
Great to hear, Jennie! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I can’t have celrontro makes my throat itch.
Omit it! Or use parsley.
Looks delicious! Do you think I can use white meat ground turkey? Thanks!
I do!
A winner. I made these for dinner with homemade buns. The flavor is excellent. I have never been a fan of turkey burgers, something about the tang of turkey. These burgers have none of that. I didn’t weight my apple and think I may have put in too much as I had to chill them before cooking to firm them up. I cooked precisely to the directions and they were perfect (4 minutes per side). They did develop that nice char. Thank you very much.
So nice to read all of this, Genevieve! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of these notes. I have definitely used too much apple at some point — sometimes Honey Crisps can be massive, and when that is the case, I find it’s best to not use all of it. I like to weigh just for the reassurance I’m using roughly the right amount. Anyway, so glad these were a hit!
Does the apple make it taste sweet? My partner is averse to mixing sweet and savory … are there other alternatives?
It doesn’t! I wouldn’t describe the flavor profile of this as sweet and savory.
Dear Lisa,
I am enjoying greatly,bread, toast, crumbs cooking boo, so much, but to my grand surprise, I found no RECIPE for CIABATTA Bread, next to the Baguette, is my favorite bread to enjoy at
anytime of the day. Maybe I missed it, if so can you tell me where I can find it. Thank you so very much all you do……
Hi! There is no recipe for ciabatta in Bread Toast Crumbs, but I have one here: How to Make Fresh Homemade Ciabatta Bread
And I also have a baguette recipe here: Crusty, Open-Crumb Baguettes
Loved these!! So delicious!!
Great to hear, Emily! Thanks for writing 🙂
Dear Alexander,
Thank you for what looks like another yummy recipe. I haven’t made it but looking forward to trying it. May of your recipes are on repeat in our household!
I noticed that you recommended a grill mat. I haven’t used one before so did a wee bit of research; simply put they’re made of teflon coated fiberglass. I need to do a deeper dive to feel safe using one cooking for my family, but I’m intrigued with the idea of make grilling easier and more efficient for certain types of ingredients like fish and veggies.
Are you confident that they are safe and by what source?
Cheers and again thank you!
Hi Deb! I’m actually not certain of the safety of this mat, so I wouldn’t order it if you have any hesitations… all I keep reading about right now are all of the microplastics pervading our food system, and it’s alarming and making me re-evaluate many of my food storage options and beyond.
Hi Ali: I made these tonight (did half a recipe) and we each ate two of them. They were quite ‘charred’ but it didn’t affect the taste at all. DELICIOUS. But I had trouble getting the cilantro/apple mix to puree in the food processor; I even put it in the smaller one and didn’t have a lot of luck. Quite a mess. But I am not sure it made any real difference as we loved the burgers and will make the full recipe next time. and keep them in the fridge. Good suggestion. Thanks again!
Great to hear, Judi! Bummer about the food processor giving you trouble. I use my 14-cup Cuisinart and have no issues. I did have trouble using my Vitamix, however — it was impossible to puree.
What size/make food processor were you using initially?
Outstanding! Cooked the turkey burgers for my family and served on pretzel buns (+toppings) with the homemade tzatziki, your Caesar salad dressing on fresh greens and roasted sweet potatoes. They were particularly excited to have the turkey burgers leftovers throughout the week. Home run!
So nice to read all of this, Courtney! I love these leftovers — cold, straight from the fridge, so good. Glad your family approved!
These are truly delicious and remarkably easy to make! Cooked mine in the air fryer (with just a little spritz of oil). Glad I have 7 more in the freezer!
Great to hear, Rochelle! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Delicious! Easy to combine the ingredients in my mini food processor. I didn’t tell my family what was in them because I think they would have said, “There’s too many weird ingredients!” They gobbled them up (no pun intended), and I’ll definitely make again!
Ha! Love that pun so much 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 💕💕
These were delicious! The flavors were wonderful! I used apricot jam. The first three I made I fried, but the rest I baked in oven & they were so good too! I think these would make great meat balls! Thank you! I love your recipes!
Great to hear, Barb! I think meatballs (and meatloaf as someone else suggested) would be great, too. Thank you for writing and for your kind words 🙂
Hi Ali! I made these twice this month. First as panfried burgers, and last night as a meatloaf. They are very moist and actually my first ever turkey meatloaf or burger from scratch. I went the apricot jam route, parsley/cilantro mix, a random red apple, mix of scallions and white onion. The recipe is very forgiving! Stovetop method was good but a bit messy/smoky. For the meatloaf I lined my loafpan with parchment paper and cooked until 165 degrees. We were co-roasting with sheet pan root veggies so the temps were a little warm. I liked both results for flavor profile. I think I might reduce the apple mixture volume a bit as my end results were tasty but softer than I like. No complaints and thank you so much for all the tips and tricks on this one!
Great to hear, Anna! Thanks for writing and sharing all of these notes. I am eager to try this as a meatloaf for the ease and especially the less-mess factor 🙂
PS I used 93% lean ground turkey. Not sure how that factors in. The loaf leftovers are excellent!
Great to hear, Anna 🙂
I would love to make the turkey burger recipe. unfortunately, my daughter has an anaphylactic reaction to mangoes. Another choice please?
Try apricot jam! A few other commenters have used that with success.
These are delicious, without a doubt. While Mindy may credit Oprah (https://www.oprah.com/food/mar-a-lago-turkey-burger), the idea of adding apple & chutney started with Mar-a-Lago. Oprah featured Donald Trump and his executive chef in Oprah’s Favorite Things. These seem like a nice variation, and I like the idea of curry as an add-in. Good food is good food, no matter where the idea comes from. Thank you for sharing another excellent recipe.