Thai Turkey Lettuce Wraps deliver big restaurant flavor fast with a simple sweet-spicy sauce and a build-your-own setup that works for picky eaters. They’re light, high-protein, and easy to prep ahead without getting soggy!
243 CAL 16g CARBS 8g FAT 30g PROTEIN 5
Thai Turkey Lettuce Wraps Recipe
These are my “it’s 6 p.m., and I need dinner to feel fun” lettuce wraps. The turkey is saucy and just spicy enough, the lettuce is cool and crisp, and the toppings make every bite feel like it came from a restaurant.
They’re also sneaky practical. Everything cooks in one skillet, and you can put the toppings in little bowls and let people build their own. (This is my favorite way to keep the peace at the dinner table!)

Before You Get Started
A few quick notes to make these extra easy and keep everything crisp.
- Butter lettuce shortcut: Grab pre-washed butter lettuce or “living” butter lettuce if you see it. The leaves stay sturdier and make wrapping a lot less annoying.
- Aromatics fast-track: Those squeeze tubes of garlic and ginger in the produce section are a legit shortcut for weeknights.
- Toppings help: Pre-shredded carrots and pre-chopped peanuts save time and give you that restaurant crunch without extra prep.
- Spice control: These can get spicy fast. Start with less red pepper flakes if you’re unsure, then add heat at the table.
How to Make Thai Turkey Lettuce Wraps
Here’s the simple flow so dinner hits the table fast.
1. Brown The Turkey
Heat coconut oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the turkey and cook until browned, breaking it up as it cooks.
2. Add The Sauce Ingredients
Stir in soy sauce, rice vinegar, brown sugar, red pepper flakes, fish sauce (if using), garlic, and ginger. Cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly.
Pro tip: If the sauce looks tight or sticky too quickly, add 1–2 tablespoons of water to loosen it and keep it glossy.
3. Prep The Lettuce And Toppings
Separate the lettuce leaves and set out the toppings: red onion, carrot, green onion, peanuts, and lime wedges.
Pro tip: Pat the lettuce dry. Wet leaves slide around, and the wraps fall apart faster.
4. Assemble And Serve
Spoon the turkey into lettuce leaves and top with onion, carrot, green onion, peanuts, and a big squeeze of lime.
Recipe Tips and Tricks
Little tweaks and variations that make this recipe work for your house.
- Protein swap: Ground chicken or beef works the same way. You can also use crumbled tofu or a vegetarian “ground” for a meatless version.
- Peanut sauce version: Stir 1–2 tablespoons of peanut butter into the sauce for a richer, Thai peanut vibe. If you want a full sauce moment, drizzle Homemade Peanut Sauce over the top instead!
- Topping upgrades: Add cucumbers, bean sprouts, jalapeños, shredded cabbage, or fresh herbs like basil or mint for extra crunch and freshness.
- Bulk it up: If you want these to be more filling, add cooked brown rice, quinoa, edamame, or rice noodles and serve it bowl-style!
- Picky eater setup: Keep the turkey mild (skip the red pepper flakes) and put Sriracha or chili crisp on the table. Everyone can customize without you making two dinners.
Serving Ideas
A few easy ways to turn this into a full dinner spread.

Storage & Reheating
- Storage: Store the turkey filling in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3–4 days. Keep lettuce and toppings separate.
- Freezer: Freeze the cooked turkey filling (without lettuce/toppings) for up to 2–3 months.
- Reheating: Reheat the filling in a skillet or microwave until hot, then build wraps fresh so the lettuce stays crisp.
- Leftovers: Turn the filling into rice bowls or noodle bowls with extra veggies and lime.
Frequently Asked Questions
Here are some of the most commonly asked questions about this recipe:
What does fish sauce actually do, and can I skip it?
Fish sauce mainly adds saltiness and a deep savory flavor (umami). You can skip it, but the filling may taste slightly flat, so you might want an extra splash of soy sauce and a squeeze of lime to perk it up.
Why is my turkey filling watery?
This usually happens if the pan wasn’t hot enough to brown the turkey, or if you stirred constantly. Let the turkey brown first, then add the sauce, and simmer briefly so it clings instead of pooling.