A solid pork with apple cream sauce turns a basic weeknight cut into something that tastes like a restaurant plate without the fuss. You sear pork until the surface browns, then build a pan sauce from apples, stock, and cream so every bite carries both savory and sweet notes. This version keeps the steps tight and the ingredient list short so you can get dinner on the table in under 40 minutes.
The contrast is what makes the dish work: lean pork stays juicy under a lightly reduced cream sauce, while apple slices soften and keep a little bite. You don’t need specialty tools, just a heavy skillet and a spoon. If you like pork paired with fruit, our pork chops supreme is another easy route. Making this pork with apple cream sauce at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These Pork With Apple Cream Sauce
- One skillet means fewer dishes and a sauce that captures every browned bit from the pork.
- Green apples keep the cream sauce from feeling heavy by adding tartness and texture.
- The recipe uses common groceries, so no special store trip is required.
- It scales easily for two or four by adjusting the chops and apple count.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 4 boneless pork loin chops, about 1.5 cm thick and 150 g each — even thickness helps them cook at the same rate.
- 1 tbsp olive oil — used to sear the chops without sticking.
- 2 tbsp unsalted butter — adds richness when the apples cook.
- 1 large green apple, cored and sliced 5 mm thick — tart varieties hold shape better than soft red ones.
- 1 small shallot, minced — gives a mild onion base to the sauce.
- 120 ml chicken stock — loosens the pan fond and builds body.
- 120 ml heavy cream — forms the silky sauce texture.
- 1 tsp fresh thyme leaves — earthy note that pairs with pork and apple.
- ½ tsp salt, plus more to finish — seasons the meat directly.
- ¼ tsp black pepper — light spice to balance the sweet apple.
Ingredient Substitutions
Green apple: Replace with a firm Bosc pear using the same weight, about 180 g sliced. Pears soften faster than apples, so add them in the last 3 minutes of simmering to avoid a mushy sauce. The flavor shifts sweeter and less tart, which means you may want a small squeeze of lemon to keep the balance. The pork with apple cream sauce works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Heavy cream: Use an equal amount of half-and-half if you want a lighter sauce. Half-and-half curdles more easily at a hard boil, so keep the heat at medium-low heat once it goes in. The finished sauce will be thinner and slightly less rich but still coats the pork. Storing leftover pork with apple cream sauce correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Chicken stock: Swap with unsalted vegetable stock in the same volume for a pork dish that suits a mixed-diet table. Vegetable stock is lighter, so add 1 extra thyme sprig while simmering to keep the savory depth. Expect a cleaner, less meaty background note in the cream sauce.
Shallot: Use ¼ cup finely diced yellow onion if shallots are unavailable. Onion is stronger, so cook it 1 minute longer to soften the raw edge before adding stock. The sauce gets a slightly sweeter base but the difference is small once cream is added. If you enjoyed this, our shrimp tacos cilantro is worth trying next.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Pat the pork chops dry with paper towels and season both sides with salt and pepper. Dry surfaces brown faster, so don’t skip this step before the pan heats.
- Warm 1 tbsp olive oil in a heavy 30 cm skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers. Place the chops in without crowding and sear 3 minutes per side until golden and crispy. Move them to a plate.
- Lower the heat to medium heat and add 2 tbsp butter to the same skillet. Drop in the sliced apple and minced shallot, cooking 4 minutes until the apple edges soften but still hold shape.
- Pour in 120 ml chicken stock and scrape the browned bits from the pan bottom with a wooden spoon. Let it bubble 2 minutes to reduce slightly and concentrate flavor.
- Stir in 120 ml heavy cream, 1 tsp thyme, and any juices from the pork plate. Set the chops back into the sauce and simmer 5 minutes at medium-low heat until the pork reaches 63°C internal and the sauce thickens to coat a spoon.
- Turn off the heat and rest the skillet 2 minutes before serving so the sauce settles around the meat. Taste and add a pinch of salt if needed.
Pro Tips
Buy chops of equal thickness so they finish together; a 1.5 cm cut sears and simmers in the times given without drying. A meat thermometer removes the guesswork on doneness.
Let the seared chops rest on the plate while the apples cook so the muscle relaxes and the juices redistribute. Slicing too early loses that moisture into the board.
Save the pork plate juices and return them with the cream; they carry seasoned flavor that plain stock lacks. This small step deepens the sauce without extra salt.
For pan sauce technique basics, see the skillet sauce guide on Minimalist Baker. Their reduction tips apply directly to cream-based versions like this one.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Crowding the skillet steams the pork instead of searing it, leaving a gray surface and weak fond. Cook in two batches if your pan is under 30 cm wide.
Boiling the cream sauce hard after adding dairy can break it into greasy clumps. Keep the final simmer at medium-low heat and stir once or twice only.
Using a soft red apple makes the slices collapse into the sauce and turn it cloudy. Firm green apples keep distinct pieces and a cleaner tart note. For another easy option, check out our strawberry sauce only.
Serving Suggestions
Spoon the pork with apple cream sauce over mashed potatoes so the sauce pools and soaks in. Buttered egg noodles also work as a base for the cream.
Add a sharp side like our tzatziki sauce with cucumber salad to cut the richness. The cool yogurt contrast balances the warm pork plate.
For a drink pairing, the bourbon apple cider echoes the fruit in the pan without repeating the cream. Keep portions small so the meal stays the focus.
Storage and Reheating
Place leftovers in an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 3 days. The cream sauce thickens cold but loosens with gentle heat.
Reheat in a skillet over medium-low heat, stirring often, until the pork hits 74°C internal and the sauce steams. Avoid the microwave if you can, since it separates the cream.
This dish does not freeze well because the cream sauce can split when thawed. If you must freeze, do it before adding cream and stir the dairy in fresh during reheating.
Recipe Variations
Cider Version
Replace 60 ml of the chicken stock with dry apple cider for a stronger fruit backbone. Simmer 1 minute longer to cook off the alcohol before cream goes in. The sauce tastes more autumnal and pairs well with roasted roots.
Mustard Twist
Whisk 1 tsp Dijon mustard into the sauce with the cream for a gentle tang. Mustard also helps stabilize the emulsion so the sauce stays smooth. Expect a paler color and a sharper finish against the apple.
Herb Swap
Trade thyme for 1 tbsp chopped sage to shift the profile more wintery and pine-like. Sage crisps nicely if you add a few leaves with the butter early. The pork reads more holiday than weeknight with this change.
Pan Sauce Base
If you want a French-style mother sauce route, our bechamel sauce can replace the cream and stock step. Use 240 ml warm bechamel instead and skip the reduction. The result is thicker and more neutral, letting the apple lead.
Pork With Apple Cream Sauce
Description
A basic boneless pork loin chop turns restaurant-worthy in under 40 minutes thanks to a one-skillet pan sauce of green apple, shallot, chicken stock, and heavy cream. Lean pork stays juicy under a lightly reduced silky sauce while apple slices keep a little bite for savory-sweet balance.
Ingredients
Instructions
-
Season the pork
Pat the 4 pork loin chops dry with paper towels and season both sides with ½ tsp salt and ¼ tsp black pepper. Dry surfaces brown faster, so do not skip this drying step before the pan heats up.
-
Sear the chops
Warm 1 tbsp olive oil in a heavy 30 cm skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers. Place the chops in without crowding and sear 3 minutes per side until golden and crispy, then move them to a plate.
-
Cook apple and shallot
Lower the heat to medium heat and add 2 tbsp butter to the same skillet. Drop in the sliced green apple and minced shallot, cooking 4 minutes until the apple edges soften but still hold their shape.
-
Deglaze with stock
Pour in 120 ml chicken stock and scrape the browned bits from the pan bottom with a wooden spoon. Let it bubble 2 minutes to reduce slightly and concentrate the flavor from the pork fond.
-
Build cream sauce
Stir in 120 ml heavy cream, 1 tsp thyme, and any juices from the pork plate. The sauce should look silky and begin to thicken as the dairy warms through.
-
Simmer chops in sauce
Set the chops back into the sauce and simmer 5 minutes at medium-low heat until the pork reaches 63°C internal and the sauce thickens to coat a spoon. Use a meat thermometer to confirm the safe doneness of the whole-cut pork.
-
Rest the skillet
Turn off the heat and rest the skillet 2 minutes before serving so the sauce settles around the meat. This short rest lets the pork relax and the juices redistribute.
-
Final season and serve
Taste the sauce and add a pinch of salt if needed before plating. Spoon the pork with apple cream sauce over your chosen base while still warm.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 4
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 420kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 28g44%
- Saturated Fat 14g70%
- Cholesterol 115mg39%
- Sodium 480mg20%
- Total Carbohydrate 10g4%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Sugars 6g
- Protein 32g64%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Place leftovers in an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 3 days; the cream sauce thickens cold but loosens with gentle heat.
- Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium-low heat, stirring often, until the pork hits 74°C internal and the sauce steams; avoid the microwave so the cream does not separate.
- Pro tip: Save the pork plate juices and return them with the cream to deepen the sauce without extra salt, and for a French-style base try our bechamel sauce.
- Rest: Let the seared chops rest on the plate while apples cook so juices redistribute and are not lost when slicing.
