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Creamy Garlic Pork Chops

Thick pork chops in a glossy garlic cream sauce are one of those dinners that tastes like you spent far longer at the stove than you actually did. The pork ... Read more

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Creamy Garlic Pork Chops

Thick pork chops in a glossy garlic cream sauce are one of those dinners that tastes like you spent far longer at the stove than you actually did. The pork sears up with a deep golden crust, then finishes in a sauce that’s velvety, savory, and just sharp enough from the Dijon to keep every bite interesting. It’s the kind of skillet dinner that lands on the table fast but still feels like you cooked with intention.

What makes this version work is the order. The chops brown first, then the same pan builds the sauce from the browned bits left behind. That’s where the flavor lives, and it’s why you don’t want to rush past the deglazing step. The cream gets a short simmer instead of a hard boil, which keeps it smooth, and the parmesan goes in at the end so it melts into the sauce instead of turning grainy.

You’ll find the timing for getting juicy pork without overcooking it, plus a few smart swaps for when you’re short on an ingredient. If you’ve had cream sauces split or pork chops dry out before, this method fixes both problems.

The sauce thickened up beautifully and clung to the pork chops instead of running all over the plate. I used bone-in chops and they stayed juicy through the last simmer, which is usually where mine dry out.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Creamy Garlic Pork Chops deserve a spot on your dinner board when you want a skillet meal with a golden sear and a sauce that actually coats the meat.

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The Sear That Keeps Pork Chops Juicy Instead of Gray

Pork chops dry out when they spend too long chasing color in a pan that isn’t hot enough. The trick here is to season them well, get the skillet properly hot, and leave them alone long enough to build a crust before you turn them. If the chops stick at first, that’s normal; once the surface has browned, they release more easily.

The other mistake is cooking them all the way through during the sear. Pull them once they’re deeply golden and let the sauce finish the job. Bone-in chops hold onto moisture better than boneless ones, which gives you a wider window before they overcook.

If your pork chops look pale and gray instead of browned, the heat was too low or the pan was crowded. Give them space and let the surface do its work.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Creamy Garlic Pork Chops, golden sauce, skillet dinner
  • Bone-in pork chops — The bone helps slow the cooking a little and keeps the meat juicier than thin boneless chops. A 1-inch chop is the sweet spot here because it sears well without drying out before the sauce finishes it.
  • Olive oil and butter — The oil raises the smoke point for searing, then the butter brings flavor into the sauce base. Use both; butter alone can brown too quickly before the chops develop real color.
  • Garlic — Eight cloves sounds like a lot, but this sauce needs that amount to taste like garlic after the cream and broth go in. Mince it finely so it softens quickly without burning.
  • Chicken broth — This loosens the pan and lifts the browned bits off the bottom. If you use water instead, the sauce tastes flatter, so broth is worth keeping in the recipe.
  • Heavy cream — This is what gives the sauce its body and that glossy finish. Half-and-half can work in a pinch, but it won’t thicken as much and it’s more likely to split if you boil it hard.
  • Dijon mustard and parmesan — Dijon adds a little bite that keeps the sauce from tasting heavy, and parmesan sharpens the whole pan at the end. Add the parmesan off the hottest part of the burner so it melts smoothly.

Building the Sauce in the Same Pan You Sear the Pork

Browning the Chops First

Season the pork chops well, then sear them in hot oil until they’re deep golden on both sides. You’re looking for a crust that releases cleanly from the pan and a center that’s still a little underdone. If the chops are thick, they’ll need that final simmer in the sauce to finish without turning tough.

Softening the Garlic Without Burning It

When the chops come out, drop the heat slightly before adding the butter and garlic. Garlic needs about a minute in the fat, just until it smells sweet and fragrant; if it turns brown, it goes bitter fast. Stir constantly and move straight to the liquid once it’s ready.

Reducing the Cream to the Right Texture

After the broth lifts the browned bits, add the cream, Italian seasoning, and Dijon. Let the sauce simmer gently until it lightly coats a spoon and the bubbles look lazy, not violent. A hard boil can make cream separate, so keep the heat low enough that the sauce thickens gradually.

Finishing the Pork in the Sauce

Return the chops to the skillet and spoon the sauce over the top while they finish cooking. This is the part where the pork picks up the garlic and thyme notes from the sauce. Stir in the parmesan at the end, then stop once it melts; overcooking at this stage is what turns a smooth sauce grainy.

How to Adapt Creamy Garlic Pork Chops for Different Nights

Make It Dairy-Free

Swap the butter for dairy-free butter and use full-fat coconut cream or an unsweetened plain cooking cream in place of heavy cream. The sauce won’t taste exactly the same, but it will still turn silky and rich if you keep the simmer gentle and skip a vigorous boil.

Use Boneless Pork Chops

Boneless chops cook faster, so trim the sear time a little and watch the center closely during the final simmer. They’ll still work, but they’re easier to overcook, so pull them the moment they reach done rather than giving them extra time “just in case.”

Make the Sauce a Little Lighter

You can replace part of the cream with more broth for a thinner sauce, but it will lose some of the velvet texture that makes this dish feel special. If you do that, let it reduce a little longer so the flavor doesn’t get washed out.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The sauce thickens in the fridge, so expect it to look a little tighter the next day.
  • Freezer: Cream sauces don’t freeze especially well because they can separate when thawed. If you need to freeze it, do so for up to 1 month and reheat gently, knowing the texture may not be as smooth.
  • Reheating: Warm it slowly in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of broth or cream. High heat is the quickest way to split the sauce and dry out the pork.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use boneless pork chops instead of bone-in?+

Yes, but they cook faster and dry out more easily. Keep the sear a little shorter and check the center early during the final simmer. Bone-in chops give you more cushion, which is why they’re my first choice here.

How do I keep the cream sauce from curdling?+

Keep the heat at a gentle simmer after the cream goes in. If the sauce boils hard, the fat can separate and the texture turns greasy or grainy. Low heat gives the sauce time to thicken without breaking.

Can I make creamy garlic pork chops ahead of time?+

You can cook them ahead, but the sauce is best the day it’s made. Reheat slowly and add a splash of broth or cream to bring the sauce back together. If you’re planning ahead, stop just short of fully reducing the sauce, then finish it when you reheat.

How do I know when the pork chops are done?+

They should be cooked through but still juicy, with the center no longer pink and the juices running clear. If you use a thermometer, pull them at 145°F and let the sauce carry them the rest of the way during the short simmer. That resting time matters because the temperature keeps rising after the pan comes off the heat.

Can I leave out the Dijon mustard?+

You can, but the sauce will taste flatter and heavier. Dijon doesn’t make it taste like mustard; it sharpens the cream and garlic so the sauce doesn’t feel one-note. If you skip it, add a tiny squeeze of lemon at the end to bring back some brightness.

Creamy Garlic Pork Chops

Creamy garlic pork chops seared in a skillet, then finished in a velvety golden garlic cream sauce. The sauce simmers until thick, bubbles around the chops, and turns glossy with parmesan and fresh thyme flecks.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

pork chops
  • 4 bone-in pork chops about 1 inch thick
seasoning
  • 1 Salt and black pepper to taste
sear and sauce
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 tbsp butter
  • 8 garlic minced
  • 0.5 cup chicken broth
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning
  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 0.25 cup parmesan cheese grated
garnish
  • 1 fresh thyme for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Season and sear
  1. Season the pork chops generously with salt and pepper.
  2. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat and sear the chops for 4–5 minutes per side until golden; set them aside.
Make the garlic cream sauce
  1. Melt the butter in the same pan and sauté the garlic for 1 minute until fragrant.
  2. Pour in the chicken broth and bring it to a simmer, scraping up any browned bits from the pan.
  3. Stir in the heavy cream, Italian seasoning, and Dijon mustard, then simmer for 3–4 minutes until slightly thickened.
Finish and serve
  1. Return the pork chops to the pan, spoon the sauce over them, and simmer for 3–5 minutes until cooked through; stir the sauce as needed.
  2. Stir in the parmesan cheese and garnish with fresh thyme, letting the sauce bubble gently and turn glossy.

Notes

Pro tip: keep the sauce at a gentle simmer (not a hard boil) once the cream goes in so it stays silky. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days; reheat gently in a skillet over low heat until warmed through. Freezing: not recommended for best texture. Dietary swap: use half-and-half instead of heavy cream for a lighter sauce (it may be slightly less thick).
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