Juicy pork chops and a glossy peppercorn cream sauce make a dinner that feels a little special without turning into a project. The chops get a deep, savory sear first, then the pan does the rest of the work by building a sauce around the browned bits left behind. That sauce clings to the pork with a faint heat from cracked peppercorns and enough richness to balance every bite.
What makes this version work is the order. The pork sears hard and comes out before the sauce starts, so the pan stays hot enough to pull real color from the meat. Then the shallots soften in the butter, the brandy cooks down, and the broth reduces before the cream goes in. That reduction matters; if you rush it, the sauce tastes thin instead of concentrated and peppery.
Below you’ll find the exact cues I watch for at each stage, plus a few smart swaps if you don’t have brandy or want to serve the sauce with something other than pork. The whole recipe stays straightforward, but a couple of small details keep the sauce smooth and the chops tender.
The sauce thickened up right at the 4-minute mark and the cracked pepper gave it a nice bite without overpowering the pork. My husband kept dipping bread in the pan sauce after dinner.
Save these seared pork chops with peppercorn sauce for the night you want a French-style pan sauce with almost no extra cleanup.
The Sear Is Doing More Than Browning the Pork
The biggest mistake with peppercorn pork chops is treating the sauce as the main event and rushing the meat. The sear sets the flavor for everything that follows. If the chops go into the pan cold, or if the heat is too low, you get pale pork and a sauce that has to work too hard to taste like much of anything.
Bone-in chops hold onto moisture better than boneless ones, and a 1-inch thickness gives you enough time to build a crust before the center overcooks. The pan should sound lively when the pork hits it. If it barely whispers, the surface is already losing steam instead of browning, which means less flavor in the pan sauce.
- Bone-in pork chops — The bone gives you a little insurance against drying out. Boneless chops work in a pinch, but they cook faster and don’t stay as juicy.
- Coarsely cracked black pepper — This is where the sauce gets its character. Fine pepper turns muddy and harsh; coarse pepper gives you visible specks and a clean bite.
- Brandy or cognac — This adds depth and a faint sweetness once it reduces. If you skip it, use a splash of dry white wine, but the sauce will taste a little flatter.
- Heavy cream — There isn’t a perfect substitute here if you want the same silkiness. Half-and-half can work, but the sauce will be thinner and needs gentler heat.
- Dijon mustard — It doesn’t make the sauce taste like mustard. It sharpens the cream and keeps the sauce from reading heavy.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Pork Dish

- Pork (cut properly for the method) — Pat dry so it browns instead of steams. Even thickness ensures uniform cooking.
- Oil or butter (the browning medium) — High-heat oil essential for proper searing. Creates pan flavor.
- Seasonings (salt, pepper, spices) — Build flavor boldly. Pork carries the entire profile.
- Aromatics (garlic, onion, ginger) — Cook with fat to bloom flavors. Become foundation of dish.
- Sauce or liquid (the moisture keeper) — Keeps lean pork from drying. Balance richness with acid.
- Vegetables (if using) — Layer by cooking time so everything finishes together. Hard vegetables first.
- Acid (vinegar, wine, citrus) — Brightens sauce and prevents heavy flavor. Add near end.
- Proper doneness (145°F, slightly pink center) — Pork is safe at this temp and stays juicy. Higher temps dry it out.
Build the Sauce in the Same Pan You Seared the Pork In
Seasoning and Searing the Chops
Season the pork generously with salt and cracked pepper before it touches the pan. The chops should go into hot olive oil and stay there long enough to form a deep golden crust that releases cleanly when it’s ready. If they stick, give them another minute; forcing them early tears the surface and leaves the best browning behind.
Softening the Shallots
After the chops come out, add the butter and let it melt into the browned bits left in the pan. The shallots should soften and turn glossy, not brown hard. If the heat is too high here, they scorch and that bitterness carries straight into the cream sauce.
Reducing the Brandy and Broth
Add the brandy carefully and let it bubble until the sharp alcohol smell cooks off. Then pour in the broth and reduce it by about half before adding the cream. This step concentrates the pan juices; if you add the cream too early, the sauce can taste loose and never quite settle into that restaurant-style finish.
Finishing with Cream and Peppercorns
Stir in the cream, Dijon, and cracked peppercorns, then let the sauce simmer gently until it coats a spoon. The sauce should thicken enough to leave a trail when you drag a spoon through it. Return the pork chops and simmer just until heated through; overcooking at this stage is how perfectly seared chops turn dry.
How to Adapt This for Different Pantry Setups
No alcohol, same peppery finish
Skip the brandy and use an extra splash of beef broth with a teaspoon of white wine vinegar or lemon juice at the end. You won’t get the same depth, but the sauce still tastes bright and balanced instead of flat.
Boneless pork chops
Boneless chops cook faster and dry out more easily, so shave a couple of minutes off the sear and watch the center closely. Pull them as soon as they hit 145°F and give them a short rest before returning them to the sauce.
Dairy-free version
Use olive oil instead of butter and swap in full-fat coconut cream or an unsweetened dairy-free cooking cream. The sauce won’t taste exactly the same, but the pepper and shallots still carry the dish, and the texture stays rich if you simmer it slowly.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 3 days. The sauce thickens as it chills, so it may look a little dense the next day.
- Freezer: The chops freeze fine, but the cream sauce can separate after thawing. Freeze only if you don’t mind a slightly less silky texture, and thaw overnight in the fridge.
- Reheating: Warm gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of broth or cream. High heat is the fastest way to make the sauce break and the pork go stringy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Pork Chops with Peppercorn Sauce
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the pork chops generously with salt and coarsely cracked black pepper, making sure the coating is even across the surface. Set them aside while you heat the skillet.
- Heat olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Sear the pork chops 4–5 minutes per side until golden, then transfer to a plate and set aside.
- Melt butter in the same pan over medium heat. Add the finely diced shallots and sauté for 2 minutes until softened.
- Add the minced garlic and cook for 30 seconds, stirring until fragrant. Keep the heat at medium so the garlic doesn’t brown.
- Carefully add the brandy or cognac and cook for 1 minute until reduced, scraping up any browned bits. The pan should look glossy and aromatic.
- Pour in the beef broth and reduce by half. You should see the liquid visibly shrink and thicken slightly before the next step.
- Stir in the heavy cream, coarsely cracked black peppercorns, and Dijon mustard. Bring the sauce to a gentle simmer and watch the peppercorns remain speckled throughout.
- Simmer 4–5 minutes until the sauce thickens, then return the pork chops to the pan. Simmer for 3 minutes so the chops warm through, then garnish with fresh thyme and serve.