Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Homestyle Lamb Chop Recipe

Pan-seared lamb chops with crisp edges and a cozy, creamy garlic herb sauce. Weeknight-friendly, dinner party worthy, and designed for mopping up with something carby.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
Pan-seared lamb chops in a skillet with creamy garlic herb sauce, steam rising, and chopped parsley on top

If you want lamb chops that feel like a hug but still have a little swagger, this is the move. We are talking golden, crisp-edged chops that get a quick rest while you build a creamy garlic herb sauce right in the same pan. No complicated techniques, no pantry oddballs you buy once and never touch again. Just good heat, good seasoning, and a sauce that makes you pause mid-bite like, okay, wow.

This is homestyle in the best way: comforting, a little fancy without trying too hard, and absolutely begging for mashed potatoes, buttered noodles, or crusty bread. Also, if your sauce looks a little chaotic at first, congrats, you are cooking like a real person. We will fix it together.

Two lamb chops plated with creamy sauce and a spoon, with mashed potatoes in the background

Why It Works

  • Crisp, browned lamb: A hot pan plus dry, well-seasoned chops gives you that steakhouse-style sear.
  • Velvety sauce that will not taste flat: Shallot, garlic, Dijon, and a splash of lemon keep the cream sauce bright and balanced.
  • One pan, low drama: The sauce uses the browned bits from searing, so you get big flavor without extra steps.
  • Easy to scale: Make 4 chops for a weeknight, or double the sauce for company and extra spooning.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

How to Store and Reheat Leftovers

Fridge: Store lamb and sauce in an airtight container for up to 3 days. If possible, keep the chops and sauce separate so the lamb stays less soggy.

Freezer: You can freeze the lamb for up to 2 months. Cream sauces can separate after freezing, but it is still totally usable. Thaw overnight in the fridge.

Reheat (best method): Warm the sauce gently in a small skillet over low heat, adding a splash of broth or water to loosen. Reheat lamb in the same skillet, covered, just until warmed through. Avoid high heat or the chops can tighten up.

Leftover win: Slice the lamb and toss it with the reheated sauce over egg noodles or rice. Add a handful of spinach at the end and call it dinner round two.

Common Questions

Common Questions

What kind of lamb chops should I buy?

Rib chops are among the most tender and cook quickly. Loin chops are a bit meatier, like tiny T-bones, and they are also very tender. Both work here. Aim for chops about 1 to 1 1/2 inches thick so you can get a good sear without overcooking.

How do I know when lamb chops are done?

The easiest way is a thermometer inserted into the thickest part, not touching bone. These are pull temps. The chops will climb a few degrees as they rest.

  • Medium-rare: pull at 130 to 135°F, rest to about 135 to 140°F
  • Medium: pull at 140 to 145°F, rest to about 145 to 150°F

Lamb is at its best when it stays juicy, so I recommend medium-rare to medium.

My sauce looks broken or greasy. Can I fix it?

Yes. Pull the pan off the heat and whisk in 1 to 2 tablespoons of cold cream or a splash of broth. Keep the heat low and whisk gently. Also make sure you are not boiling the sauce once the cream is in.

Can I make this without cream?

You can swap in half-and-half for a lighter sauce, or use full-fat coconut milk for dairy-free with a slightly different flavor. Keep the heat low either way.

Why do you rest the chops?

Resting for 5 minutes lets the juices redistribute so you do not lose them to the cutting board. Also, it gives you time to make the sauce without rushing.

Is it okay to let the lamb sit out before cooking?

Yes, a short sit helps the chops cook more evenly. Keep it to about 10 to 20 minutes while you prep. For food safety, do not leave raw meat at room temp longer than 1 hour total (or 2 hours max if your kitchen is cool, per general guidance).

I used to think lamb chops were reserved for white-tablecloth nights, like you needed a special occasion and a perfectly pressed shirt to pull them off. Then I started cooking them at home the same way I treat a good steak: hot pan, fearless seasoning, and a quick sauce built from whatever magic is stuck to the bottom of the skillet.

This creamy version is my favorite because it is both comforting and bold. It is the kind of dinner that makes a Tuesday feel like it has plans. Also, I will admit it. I almost always make extra sauce. Not because it is polite, but because I want something to drag a potato through like it owes me money.