Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Citrus Pork Chops

Juicy, weeknight-friendly pork chops with crisp edges and a bright orange-lime pan sauce that tastes like you tried way harder than you did.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
Two seared bone-in pork chops in a cast iron skillet with a glossy citrus pan sauce, orange slices, and fresh herbs

If weeknights had a theme song, it would be the sound of a hot skillet and me whispering, “please be good in 30 minutes.” These citrus-kissed bone-in pork chops are exactly that kind of dinner: fast, loud (in a good way), and wildly rewarding for how little effort it takes.

We are going for crisp, golden edges, a juicy center, and a pan sauce that hits that sweet spot between bright and cozy. Think orange and lime, a little honey, a little garlic, and just enough butter to make you want to drag a piece of bread through the pan when nobody is looking. It is approachable, flexible, and very “taste as you go” friendly.

A close-up of a sliced pork chop showing a juicy center with citrus sauce pooled on the plate

Why It Works

  • Bone-in chops stay juicy: The bone helps insulate the meat, buying you a little grace on a busy night.
  • Quick seasoning rest: A short salt-and-rest can help the chops season more evenly and can improve juiciness.
  • Real pan sauce, no drama: Citrus deglazes the browned bits, honey balances the tang, and butter turns it glossy.
  • High heat, then gentle finish: You get the sear first, then you finish to a safe temperature without drying things out.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Refrigerate: Store chops and sauce in an airtight container for up to 3 to 4 days. If you can, keep extra sauce separate so the crust stays less soggy.

Freeze: Freeze cooked chops with a little sauce (helps prevent dryness) for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge.

Reheat without ruining them: Warm gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of water or broth until just heated through. You can also microwave at 50 percent power in short bursts. Pork dries out when it gets blasted, so go slow.

Leftover move: Slice cold pork thin and toss it into a salad with citrus segments and a quick vinaigrette made from the leftover sauce.

Common Questions

What internal temperature should pork chops be?

For chops, I aim for 145°F in the thickest part, then rest. The USDA recommended safe temperature for whole cuts of pork is 145°F with a 3-minute rest. I usually rest 5 minutes because it keeps the chops juicier and gives carryover heat time to finish the job.

Thermometer tip: Insert the probe into the thickest part and avoid touching the bone, which can give you a false reading.

Can I use boneless pork chops?

Yes. Boneless cooks faster and can dry out quicker, so watch the temperature closely. Sear the same way, then expect the cook time to drop by a few minutes depending on thickness.

My sauce tastes too sharp. How do I fix it?

Two easy saves: add another teaspoon of honey, or swirl in an extra tablespoon of butter. You can also add a splash of chicken broth to soften the acidity.

My chops are tough. What happened?

Usually one of three things: the chops were too thin, they were overcooked, or they did not rest. Use 1 to 1 1/2 inch chops if possible and rely on a thermometer.

Can I make it dairy-free?

Absolutely. Swap the butter for olive oil at the end. The sauce will be less silky but still bright and delicious.

Any substitutions for the honey or citrus?

Yes. Maple syrup or light brown sugar works in place of honey. Lemon can step in for lime, and you can do all orange if that is what you have. Taste as you go and adjust the sweetness to balance the tang.

This recipe came out of one of those nights where I had pork chops, a couple tired citrus fruits rolling around the drawer, and exactly zero interest in making a “real” sauce. So I did what I always do: got the pan hot, chased crisp edges, then deglazed with whatever looked promising. The first version was too sour, the second was too sweet, and the third was the one where I finally stopped pretending I could eyeball honey like a responsible adult.

Now it is in my weeknight rotation because it tastes fresh but still feels like comfort food. Also, the sauce makes even basic sides feel fancy, which is honestly the dream on a Tuesday.