Baked pork chops with cream of mushroom soup is one of those weeknight dishes that delivers tender, gravy-coated meat with about 10 minutes of hands-on work. The shortcut version uses one can of cream of mushroom soup, bone-in pork chops, and an oven at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for roughly 45 minutes. Done right, the chops come out fork-tender, not dry.
The reason this recipe stays popular for good reason: the soup acts as both braising liquid and finished sauce. As the chops bake, they release juices that thin the soup into a proper gravy, and the soup's fat keeps the meat moist. The trick is in the chop selection, the searing, and the bake temperature.
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Choosing the right pork chops
Not all chops are equal for this dish. The cut you pick determines whether you get juicy bites or shoe leather.
- Bone-in rib chops (best): About 1 inch thick. The bone insulates the meat and prevents overcooking. Marbled fat melts into the sauce.
- Bone-in center cut loin chops: Leaner. Still good, but watch the bake time more closely.
- Boneless chops: Cook faster (about 30 minutes total). They are more likely to dry out, so brine them or sear longer.
- Thin chops (less than 3/4 inch): Skip them for this recipe. They overcook before the sauce thickens. Use them for pan-fried preparations instead.
For 4 servings, you want four chops weighing roughly 7 to 9 ounces each.
Ingredients
- 4 bone-in pork rib chops, about 1 inch thick
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika (optional, adds color and depth)
- 1 medium yellow onion, sliced into 1/4-inch rings
- 8 ounces fresh cremini or white button mushrooms, sliced
- 1 (10.5 oz) can condensed cream of mushroom soup
- 1/2 cup chicken broth or whole milk
- 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
- 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, or 1/2 teaspoon dried
- Fresh parsley, chopped, for garnish
Step-by-step method
- Prep the chops (10 minutes before cooking): Pat the chops dry with paper towels. Drying is critical for a proper sear. Season both sides with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and smoked paprika. Let them rest at room temperature while the oven preheats.
- Preheat the oven: Set to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Position a rack in the center.
- Sear (about 6 minutes total): Heat the olive oil in a large oven-safe skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Sear the chops 2 to 3 minutes per side until deeply golden. Do not cook them through. Transfer to a plate.
- Build the sauce (about 5 minutes): In the same skillet, reduce heat to medium. Add the sliced onion and mushrooms. Cook 4 to 5 minutes until the mushrooms release their water and the onions soften. Scrape up any browned bits.
- Add the soup base: Whisk together the condensed cream of mushroom soup, broth or milk, Worcestershire, and thyme in a bowl. Pour over the mushrooms and onions. Stir to combine.
- Return the chops: Nestle the seared chops back into the skillet, spooning some of the sauce over the top of each.
- Bake (about 30 to 35 minutes): Cover the skillet with foil or a lid. Bake until the internal temperature reaches 145 degrees Fahrenheit at the thickest part, not touching the bone. For 1-inch chops, expect 30 minutes. For 1 1/4-inch, expect 35 to 40 minutes.
- Rest (5 minutes): Remove from the oven. Let the chops rest in the sauce for 5 minutes. The internal temperature will rise to about 150 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the sweet spot.
- Serve: Spoon plenty of sauce over each chop. Top with chopped parsley.
Why searing matters more than you think
Skipping the sear is the most common reason home cooks find this dish bland. Searing builds the Maillard browning that flavors both the chops and the gravy. The fond (the brown bits stuck to the pan) dissolves into the soup as it bakes and deepens the whole sauce.
If you are using a baking dish instead of an oven-safe skillet, sear the chops in a separate skillet first, then deglaze that skillet with 2 tablespoons of broth and pour everything (chops, browned bits, sauteed mushrooms) into the baking dish.
Mushroom upgrades
The can of soup provides convenience but only modest mushroom flavor. Adding 8 ounces of fresh mushrooms to the dish (as in the recipe above) doubles the mushroom presence and makes the sauce taste closer to scratch-made.
For an even bigger flavor jump, swap half the cremini for fresh oyster or shiitake. Fresh-cut mushrooms from one of the home mushroom grow kits brown faster and stay meatier in the sauce than older grocery mushrooms, because they hold more internal structure before water release.
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Add to cart $299What to serve with pork chops and cream of mushroom soup
The sauce is the highlight, so pair it with something that catches and holds it.
- Mashed potatoes: The classic pairing. The starch absorbs the gravy.
- Buttered egg noodles: Faster than mashing potatoes; same gravy-soaking effect.
- Steamed rice: Long-grain white or jasmine. Spoon the chops and sauce over the top.
- Roasted green beans or broccoli: A crisp green side to cut the richness.
- Crusty bread: For mopping the plate clean.
Skip starchy sides like dinner rolls if you are already serving potatoes; the dish is rich enough that you want one absorbing element and one fresh one.
Slow cooker and Instant Pot adaptations
If you prefer to set it and forget it, the same ingredient list works in a slow cooker on low for 6 to 7 hours, or high for 3 to 4 hours. Sear the chops first; do not skip this step or the dish will taste washed out.
In a 6-quart Instant Pot, sear on the Saute setting, then add the sauce ingredients, lock the lid, and pressure cook on Manual/Pressure Cook for 12 minutes with a 10-minute natural release. Boneless chops need only 8 minutes plus 10-minute release.
Troubleshooting and storage
- Chops are dry: They were overcooked. Aim for 145 degrees Fahrenheit pulled from the oven, with a 5-minute rest.
- Sauce is too thick: Stir in 2 to 3 tablespoons more broth or milk after baking.
- Sauce is too thin: Simmer the sauce alone in the skillet over medium heat for 3 minutes after the chops are plated.
- Bland: A teaspoon more Worcestershire, a pinch more salt, and a squeeze of lemon juice will revive it.
Leftovers keep 3 days in the fridge. Reheat covered at 325 degrees Fahrenheit for 15 minutes, or in a covered skillet over medium-low heat with a tablespoon of broth to loosen the sauce. The dish freezes for 2 months, though the sauce can separate a little; whisk in a tablespoon of milk while reheating to bring it back together.
This is the kind of dinner you can make on a Tuesday and still feel like you cooked something serious. The technique is simple, the timing is forgiving, and the leftovers are arguably better than the first night.














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