Turkey is the star of Thanksgiving, and it’s pretty important to get it right – I have you covered with this simple, failproof, and mouthwatering Roast Turkey Recipe. This has a crisp, salty skin with a flavor-packed, juicy center. You’ll love my trick for a tender turkey breast every time.

Juicy Roast Turkey with golden brown skin on a serving platter garnished with fruit

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Helpful Reader Review

“I have been making your turkey recipe for a couple of years now every Thanksgiving and Christmas. My family has gone from not looking forward to turkey to RAVING about how flavourful, delicious and moist this Turkey is!” – Jennifer ★★★★★

Juicy Roast Turkey Video

This turkey recipe is well-loved with hundreds of 5-star reviews over the years. It’s fantastic! You can even make this turkey recipe a day in advance (see make-ahead tips below) if it makes your life easier, and it will taste even better! Plus, Turkey Brine is optional here, saving you a day of prep.

In this video, I’ll show you how to make this turkey, step-by-step so you can feel confident making “the year’s most important dish.”

Turkey Recipe

I was so excited about this juicy roast turkey recipe every step of the way, and I think you’ll feel the same way when you try it. The first turkey I ever made was such a flop that I was discouraged for a few years to revisit it. When I set out to make this turkey recipe, I was determined to ensure you had success the first time and every time you made this recipe.

I spent days researching the best turkey recipes online and in cookbooks, with trusted advice from my Mom and you, my readers. This Turkey recipe has been gracing your holiday tables since 2014! I’ve also been perfecting it over the years, and I can confidently say this tender and delicious turkey will impress your dinner guests.

The turkey breast is so juicy and flavorful, and the skin is crisp and roasts to a beautiful golden brown. I invited all of my family over to help eat this turkey and received rave reviews from 10 adults and quite a few kiddos. I was so giddy and excited when I tasted the juicy bird. Keep the turkey drippings to make the best Turkey Gravy; it’s super delicious and will be the talk of your Thanksgiving dinner!

Juicy roasted turkey on a serving platter

Roast Turkey Ingredients

  • Turkey – this recipe is written for an 11-15 lb turkey. A larger turkey will work, but bake time will vary (see chart below). You’ll also need salt and pepper to season the turkey inside and out.
  • Flavored Butter – unsalted butter, olive oil, lemon juice and zest, garlic, parsley, salt, and pepper
  • For the Turkey Stuffing – You can use my stuffing recipe, but I stuff the turkey cavity with onion, garlic, parsley, and a quartered lemon. I prefer to cook turkey stuffing separately from the turkey, so I stuff my turkey with aromatics instead (which makes the gravy taste awesome), but if you do stuff the turkey with traditional stuffing, make sure the stuffing reaches 165˚F in the center.
Ingredients for flavored butter to stuff under turkey skin

Don’t Forget to Thaw Your Turkey

Make sure you give yourself enough time to thaw and roast your turkey. A larger bird will take longer to thaw and roast, so plan according to the chart below.

Per the USDA guidelines, thaw your frozen turkey in the refrigerator 1 day for every 4 to 5 lbs of turkey. My 12 lb turkey took 3 days to thaw, while a 16 lb turkey would take 4 days. For a quick-thaw method, see my Spatchcock Turkey Recipe (you can defrost a 12 lb turkey in 6 hours).

turkey thawing chart with weights

How to Prepare Your Turkey for Roasting

  • Defrost the Turkey – You should never cook a frozen or partially frozen turkey or it will cook unevenly. Follow the turkey thawing guide above, depending on the size of your turkey.
  • Optional Brine Step – once the turkey is thawed, you can Brine your Turkey if you prefer (it requires 1 hour per pound), although it’s not necessary for this recipe. Also, check the turkey packaging since some turkeys are pre-brined, so you don’t need to brine again if that is the case.
  • Remove turkey from fridge about 30 minutes before you start working with it. If the turkey is closer to room temperature, it will bake more evenly. *Remove the neck and bag of giblets from the turkey and set it on a roasting pan.
  • Pat dry turkey with paper towels. Let turkey sit in over paper towels to soak up any excess water from the turkey.
  • Fold the wings behind the turkey; if you don’t they are the quickest to scorch and dry out.
Patting dry turkey and tucking wings behind turkey

Seasoning, Stuffing, and Tying up a Turkey

  • Season inside of turkey cavity generously with about 1 tsp salt and 1/4 tsp pepper.
Seasoning inside turkey carcass
  1. Make the Flavored butter – In a medium bowl (it’s even easier in the bowl of a food processor), combine 2 sticks of softened butter, 2 Tbsp olive oil, 1/2 Tbsp lemon zest, 4 Tbsp lemon juice, and 3 pressed garlic cloves, 1/4 cup chopped parsley, 1/2 Tbsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper. Mash/stir with a fork or process until well combined (the lemon juice doesn’t easily stir into butter, but keep mixing and it will happen after a few minutes). This mixture was adapted from Gordon Ramsay’s Christmas Turkey video and it’s wonderful. Take a whiff of it; you’ll fall in love with how fresh it smells!
mashing together flavored butter ingredients for turkey
  1. Separate the skin from the turkey breast by pushing your fingers under the skin. Do this from the front and the back of the turkey, being careful not to tear the skin.
Loosening turkey skin to stuff with flavored butter
  1. Stuff 2/3 of the butter mixture under skin, then spread the butter around by massaging over the top of the skin. This butter keeps the turkey breast tender and juicy and provides rich flavor.
Stuffing flavored butter under turkey skin and spreading it out
  1. Pat dry the skin and rub the remaining butter over the outside of the turkey (breast, legs, wings). Drizzle all over the top of the turkey with olive oil and generously season with salt and pepper; I just love a crisp, salty skin.
Drizzling turkey with oil and seasoning before baking
  1. Stuff the turkey cavity with a quartered onion, 4 halved garlic cloves, 1/2 bunch parsley and quartered lemon. Use kitchen string to tie the turkey base and legs together; crossing the legs to better close up the turkey cavity, plus it looks extra fancy on the table.
How to tie turkey legs together to truss turkey

How to Roast a Turkey

  • Prep: Pre-heat the oven to 430˚F on the bake mode. Place oven rack in the lower part of your oven (mine was on the second level from the very bottom) – this ensures that your large turkey roasts in the middle of the oven and keeps the turkey breast further from the top heating element.
  • Here is a fantastic tip I picked up from Alton Brown to protect the turkey breast and keep it juicy: Fold a large square sheet of foil into a triangle. Rub one side of your triangle with olive oil and shape the foil (oil-side-down) over the turkey breast, then remove foil;  it will shield your turkey breast and keep it from getting dry. You’ll apply this shield later in the roasting process.
oiling foil shield for turkey breast
Measuring and shaping foil shield over the turkey breast
  1. Insert Thermometer – Place an oven-safe meat thermometer into the bird; beneath the drumstick; deep into the dark meat. It’s ready for the oven. Start roasting uncovered at 430˚F for 20 min.
Where to insert temperature probe into turkey under the thigh
  1. Baste Turkey – Remove from oven; quickly baste with butter from the bottom of the dish. You can use a baster or tilt one side of the pan and collect drippings with a large spoon. Now apply prepared foil triangle to turkey breast area.
Basting roast turkey with butter
roasted turkey covered with a foil shield
  1. Reduce oven to 350˚F and bake for another 2 hours 30 min for a 12 lb bird. (Once you have reduced the oven to 350˚F, you will bake about 13 min for every pound of turkey). The turkey thigh should register 170-180˚F on the temperature probe and the turkey breast at 165˚F to make sure it’s fully cooked through then remove from the oven (keep in mind the turkey temp continues to rise slightly after it’s out of the oven).
Juicy Roast Turkey Recipe resting in the roasting pan
  1. Rest the Turkey – Transfer turkey to a serving platter and cover loosely but fully with foil. Let turkey rest for at least 1 hour. It will become more tender and easier to carve, the longer it sits. Keep drippings from roasting pan for a most delicious turkey gravy. Decorate around your turkey and make it festive. I used kale for my greens, then added small apples, sliced oranges and quartered lemons.
Juicy Roast Turkey on a serving platter decorated with kale and fruit
Slicing into juicy turkey breast on a baked turkey

Make-Ahead

  • To Refrigerate: You can fully prepare your turkey a day ahead – stuff, butter it up, cover, and refrigerate overnight. Remove from the refrigerator one hour before baking the next day.
  • To Freeze leftover turkey: Shred the meat and transfer it to freezer-safe zip-top bags or use a food saver to squeeze out as much air as possible, then freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator.
  • To Reheat Leftovers: My secret to the best-tasting reheated turkey is our Leftover Turkey in Gravy. We make this every year on the day after Thanksgiving.
Natasha and son holding turkey prepared for the oven

So many of you have made this roast turkey over the years, and it gives me so much joy to hear your success stories and see this turkey in photos from your Thanksgiving feasts. Also, I love this sweet photo from 2014 when we filmed this video recipe. It’s hard to believe my son is a teenager now!

I’d love to hear what is on your Thanksgiving menu this year (scroll down to see my personal menu). And I’m so curious – do you make Turkey on Thanksgiving AND Christmas? My Mom sure does and I love it! I hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday.

Juicy Roast Turkey

4.95 from 830 votes
Juicy Roast Turkey on a serving platter garnished with fruit
How to Make the Juiciest Roast Turkey Recipe – no lengthy marinating required, and the turkey brine is optional. You'll love the crisp, salty skin and the foil tip produces the juiciest turkey breast. An easy and failproof method for Thanksgiving turkey.
Cook Time: 2 hours 50 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 50 minutes

Ingredients 

Servings: 12 people

For the Turkey

  • 12 lb turkey, (Anything from 11-15 lbs will work, but bake time will vary), thawed*
  • Salt & Pepper, for the inside and outside of the bird

For the Flavored Butter

  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened, (2 sticks)
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil, not extra virgin, plus more to drizzle top
  • 4 Tbsp fresh lemon juice, from 1 large lemon, plus 1/2 Tbsp lemon zest
  • 3 large garlic cloves, pressed
  • 1/4 cup freshly chopped parsley
  • 1/2 Tbsp salt, I used sea salt
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper, freshly ground

For the Stuffing

  • 1 large onion, peeled and quartered
  • 4 garlic cloves, peeled and halved
  • 1/2 bunch parsley
  • 1 lemon, quartered

Instructions

Prepping your Turkey

  • Remove thawed turkey* from the fridge about 30 minutes before you start working with it. If the turkey is closer to room temperature, it will bake more evenly. Remove the neck and bag of giblets and pat dry turkey with paper towels. Let it sit in a roasting pan lined with paper towels to soak up any excess water then discard the paper towels. Fold the wings behind the turkey so they don't scorch in the oven.

Seasoning, Stuffing, and Tying up a Turkey

  • Season inside of turkey cavity generously with about 1 tsp salt and 1/4 tsp pepper.
  • Make Flavored Butter – In a medium bowl or in a food processor*, combine: 2 sticks softened butter, 2 Tbsp olive oil, 1/2 Tbsp lemon zest, 4 Tbsp lemon juice, 3 pressed garlic cloves, 1/4 cup chopped parsley, 1/2 Tbsp salt, 1/2 tsp pepper. Mash /stir with a fork until well combined (the lemon juice doesn't easily stir into butter but keep mixing and it will happen after a few minutes).
  • Separate the skin from the turkey breast by pushing your fingers under the skin. Do this from the front and the back of the turkey; being careful not to tear the skin.
  • Stuff 2/3 of the butter mixture under skin then spread the butter around by massaging over the top of the skin. This butter keeps the turkey breast tender, juicy and provides rich flavor.
  • Pat skin dry and rub remaining butter over the outside of the turkey (breast, legs, wings). Drizzle all over the top of the turkey with olive oil and generously season with salt and pepper; I just love a crisp, salty skin.
  • Stuff turkey cavity with quartered onion, 4 halved garlic cloves, 1/2 bunch parsley and quartered lemon. Use kitchen string to tie turkey base and legs together; crossing the legs to better close up the turkey cavity, plus it looks extra fancy on the table.

How to Roast a Turkey

  • Prep – Pre-heat the oven to 430˚F on the bake mode. Place oven rack in the lower part of your oven (mine was on the second level from the very bottom).
  • Make Foil Shield – to protect the turkey breast and keep it juicy: Fold a large square sheet of foil into a triangle. Rub one side of your triangle with olive oil and shape the foil (oil-side-down) over the turkey breast, then remove foil; it will shield your turkey breast and keep it from getting dry. You'll apply this shield later in the roasting process.
  • Place an oven-safe meat thermometer into the bird; beneath the drum stick; deep into the dark meat. Start roasting uncovered at 430˚F for 20 min.
  • Baste – Remove from oven; quickly baste with butter from the bottom of the dish. You can use a baster or tilt one side of the pan and collect drippings with a large spoon. Now apply prepared foil triangle to turkey breast area.
  • Reduce oven to 350˚F and bake for another 2 hours 30 min for a 12 lb bird. (Once you have reduced the oven to 350˚F, you will bake about 13 min for every pound of turkey). The turkey thigh should register at 170˚F on the temperature probe and the breast at 160˚F to make sure it's fully cooked through then remove from the oven (keep in mind the turkey temp continues to rise slightly after it's out of the oven*).
  • Rest Turkey – Transfer turkey to serving platter and cover loosely but fully with foil. Let turkey rest for at least 1 hour. It will become more tender and easier to carve, the longer it sits. Keep the drippings from roasting pan for turkey gravy. Now you can decorate around your turkey and make it festive. I used kale for my greens, then added small apples, sliced oranges and quartered lemons.

Notes

*To Thaw Turkey – If using a frozen turkey, defrost it in its plastic bag in the refrigerator 1 day for every 4-5 lbs (thaw a 12lb turkey for 3 days before roasting).
*A food processor makes it much easier to blend the lemon juice into t he flavored butter, saving time and effort.
*Final Temperature – As the turkey rests, it will continue to rise to a final temperature of 165˚F at the breast and 175-180˚F at the thigh. 
*Nutrition label is a rough estimate – remember that most of the butter and oil will remain in the pan when the turkey is done roasting.

Nutrition Per Serving

556kcal Calories3g Carbs103g Protein13g Fat4g Saturated Fat2g Polyunsaturated Fat4g Monounsaturated Fat0.2g Trans Fat312mg Cholesterol828mg Sodium1113mg Potassium1g Fiber1g Sugar343IU Vitamin A10mg Vitamin C61mg Calcium4mg Iron
Nutrition Facts
Juicy Roast Turkey
Amount per Serving
Calories
556
% Daily Value*
Fat
 
13
g
20
%
Saturated Fat
 
4
g
25
%
Trans Fat
 
0.2
g
Polyunsaturated Fat
 
2
g
Monounsaturated Fat
 
4
g
Cholesterol
 
312
mg
104
%
Sodium
 
828
mg
36
%
Potassium
 
1113
mg
32
%
Carbohydrates
 
3
g
1
%
Fiber
 
1
g
4
%
Sugar
 
1
g
1
%
Protein
 
103
g
206
%
Vitamin A
 
343
IU
7
%
Vitamin C
 
10
mg
12
%
Calcium
 
61
mg
6
%
Iron
 
4
mg
22
%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Juicy Roast Turkey
Skill Level: Medium
Cost to Make: $$$
Calories: 556
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

To Cook a Larger Turkey:

Many of you have asked about using a larger turkey. One of my readers, Shannon, shares her experience with a 23-pound turkey (Thanks Shannon!):

“Used this recipe last night with a 23 lb turkey and it was superb!! I used 3 sticks of butter, 1 cup of parsley, kept the zest and juice of 2 lemons and quartered them for the stuffing. Kept 1 large onion peeled & largely sliced, used about 8 cloves of garlic peeled and sliced in half. Cooked at 430 for 20 min and then 350 for about 5 1/2 hours, basting occasionally. I used the tin foil hat and had to made a couple other tin foil accessories for the legs that started to scorch. Took the tin foil hat off when it had 10 min of cook time left to ensure a nice browned top. Had tons of drippings to make a delicious gravy with. Will use this recipe every year! So flavorful and yummy. Thank you”

Natasha’s Thanksgiving Menu

These are the classic Thanksgiving recipes that we can’t go without for our annual Thanksgiving feast. Only the best for the biggest cooking day of the year!

4.95 from 830 votes (299 ratings without comment)

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating




Comments

  • Kristian
    October 8, 2023

    I have used this recipe the last 4 years and it has turned out good every time.
    Thanks

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      October 8, 2023

      Great to hear that you always love and use our Juicy Roast Turkey recipe!

      Reply

  • Ren
    October 8, 2023

    The turkey goes into the oven and comes out without it. The recipe doesn’t say when to remove the foil?

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      October 8, 2023

      Took the tin foil hat off when it had 10 minutes of cook time left to ensure a nice browned top.

      Reply

  • Tracy
    October 8, 2023

    My daughter found you some time ago when she cooked her first turkey. Have been using this recipe ever since. Without a doubt the best results every time.
    Thank you

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      October 8, 2023

      That’s great, Tracy! Thanks so much for sharing that this has been your go-to-recipe since you found this.

      Reply

  • Lani
    October 7, 2023

    Hi Natasha, I love your recipes. I tried this Roast Turkey recipe (my first time to roast a turkey) for Thanksgiving dinner tonight and it was a great success. Everybody loves it, turkey breast is so tender and juicy. And yes the gravy is super good. Thank you so much. If not for your tutorial recipe I would not have the courage to try it.

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      October 7, 2023

      Hi Lani! I’m so glad to hear that. Thank you for the wonderful feedback.

      Reply

  • Mah-Rukh Karamat
    October 7, 2023

    Hi! This is the 2nd time I will be using this recipe, but using a much larger bird this time. Can I butter the turkey the night before so I only have to pop it into the oven in the morning? Thanks.

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      October 7, 2023

      Yes, that would be fine! I’m glad you love the recipe!

      Reply

  • Peter Dmytrasz
    October 6, 2023

    Love the herbed butter under the breast skin and over the bird. We just bought a turkey over 23 pounds, to feed a crowd Monday, Canadian Thanksgiving. will definitely use your suggestions , but need to factor in the size difference. Would love to hear your advise.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      October 8, 2023

      Hi Peter, see my ‘Note’ at the top off the post where a reader experimented with a 23 pound turkey and shared details. I hope that is helpful to you and enjoy the turkey recipe!

      Reply

  • James Gehm
    February 26, 2023

    Hi!
    Can you cook a bone in turkey breast using this receipt?
    Thanks!

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      February 26, 2023

      Hi James, with a few adjustments, I bet that could work great!

      Reply

  • Sandy
    December 27, 2022

    Made this for Christmas and it was delicious and moist. Definitely make the gravy from the drippings. It is a keeper! Thanks Natasha.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 27, 2022

      You’re welcome! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, Sandy!

      Reply

  • Sue Kehoe
    December 26, 2022

    Fantastic!! So moist and flavorful. Perfect. For what it’s worth I always cook turkey breast down. I flipped it after two hours and added some bacon strips.

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      December 26, 2022

      Hi Sue! I’m so glad you loved the recipe. Thank you for sharing.

      Reply

  • Moon River
    December 23, 2022

    Love this recipe and have made it many times. Just to clarify: when we lower the temp to 350 do we keep the turkey out until the oven reaches 350 or do we put it back in immediately and let it reduce to 350 while it’s in there?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      December 23, 2022

      Hi, yes just keep the turkey in the oven as it reduces in temperature to 350.

      Reply

  • Mary Parker
    December 23, 2022

    Hi. Please explain why you emphasize using olive oil, not EVOO, when drizzling on turkey before roasting
    Thanks

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      December 23, 2022

      The light olive oil I recommended has a higher smoke value than virgin olive oil and EVOO, making it ideal for this.

      Reply

  • Martine Gibbons
    December 18, 2022

    I first tried your juicy Turkey recipe at Thanksgiving. The family enjoyed so much they are requesting again for Christmas! It’s easy to understand, just a few steps, very few ingredients & delicious. Thank you!!

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      December 19, 2022

      That’s wonderful, Martine! So glad it was a hit. Merry Christmas!

      Reply

  • Autumn
    December 8, 2022

    Can I not stuff the turkey? I love stuffing just not inside the bird…

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      December 8, 2022

      Hi Autumn! It’s not bread stuffing, this recipe calls for stuffing the turkey with onion, garlic cloves, parsley, and lemons. 🙂

      Reply

  • Grace Curry
    December 6, 2022

    can you stuff the turkey with seasoned bread, sausage meat, onion, garlic, herbs, salt and pepper instead and use the other stuffing in the neck area?

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      December 6, 2022

      Hi Grace, I have not tested it to advise. You may want to research safe measures to take if you plan on stuffing the turkey.

      Reply

  • Heather Gilmore, Ph.D.
    November 30, 2022

    I was looking at doing my very first Turkey and I wanted a really good recipe. Not only did I find it, but this was the best Turkey (not because I cooked it) but because everyone said it. The marinade is perfect. Thank you for an easy recipe but a YUMMY one! Happy Thanksgiving!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      November 30, 2022

      That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review, Heather! I’m so glad you loved it!

      Reply

  • Olga
    November 30, 2022

    I just wanted to say a big THANK YOU! My first Turkey came out so tasty, not dry! I followed all the directions and it was beyond good and easy than I expected! Love your website! All recipes and instructions are so detailed so it is easy to learn and evolve cooking skills!

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      November 30, 2022

      That’s wonderful, Olga! I appreciate the review and feedback. Thank you for the love and support.

      Reply

  • Jillian Burrill
    November 28, 2022

    Thank you for this recipe! I have used this twice now. One turkey was 15 and the other was 18! Each time the skin looked amazing and the breast was juicy!
    I wish I could attach a picture! I have no reason to look at other recipes when I’m cooking turkey. Thank you.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      November 28, 2022

      Feel free to share some photos on our Facebook page or group so others can see them too and get inspired to try other recipes!

      Reply

  • Jenean
    November 27, 2022

    I’m 62 years old, married for 40 and this was hands down the best turkey I’ve made. I never knew turkey could have this much flavor. Natasha is my new fave. I am a visual learner so the videos are perfect. She has so many tips, keeps her recipes simple, and she’s FUNNY!!!!

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      November 27, 2022

      Aaaw, thank you! That is so flattering and inspiring for us.

      Reply

  • erin
    November 27, 2022

    can you clarify? the only foil is the triangle, correct?

    I normally use foil all over. this is different, correct? only the triangle?

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      November 28, 2022

      Hi Erin! Yes, that is correct. The foil is only used to shield the breast.

      Reply

  • Faith
    November 26, 2022

    Wow, just wow! Thank you Natasha! My first turkey, and it was sooo good using this recipe. Every one loved it. The breast was tender and juicy. I also make your green bean casserole, turkey gravy–over the top, clover leaf rolls and blintzes with pineapple, blueberry and raspberry sauces. I can honesty say my dishes were the best!! Thank you! Now what do I make for Christmas? 🙂

    Reply

    • NatashasKitchen.com
      November 26, 2022

      That’s wonderful, Faith! I’m so glad it turned out amazing. This prime rib is an amazing choice for Christmas.

      Reply

      • Faith
        December 24, 2022

        Another winner Natasha! My husband does not like spices, garlic just salt. So I made this with your recipe anyway. He said do I smell garlic? I said yep. He ate it anyway, loved and said it was as good as any fancy restaurant. He asked if we could have it again! LOL Publix ran out of prime rib for Christmas darn it! Thanks Natasha because I am tired of bland foods! He would have loved the your turkey recipe too but is allergic to it. Merry Christmas!

        Reply

        • NatashasKitchen.com
          December 24, 2022

          Hi Faith! Thank you for sharing. So glad it was enjoyed. Merry Christmas!

          Reply

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