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Why This Recipe Works
- One-pan wonder: Protein, fruit, and veg roast together—no extra skillets to scrub.
- Fast flavor layering: A quick mustard-rosemary rub seasons the chops while apples add natural sweetness.
- Customizable produce: Swap in pears, Brussels sprouts, or sweet potatoes depending on the season.
- Reliable doneness: A probe thermometer guarantees juicy pork every single time.
- Make-ahead friendly: Chop vegetables the night before; store covered in the fridge.
- Kid-approved: Apples roasted in pork drippings taste like candy—no bribing required.
Ingredients You'll Need
Let’s talk pork first. I reach for bone-in rib or center-cut chops that are at least 1 inch thick; the bone insulates the meat and helps it stay succulent. Look for a faint rosy hue and small flecks of marbling—intramuscular fat equals flavor. If you can only find boneless, reduce the final oven time by 3–4 minutes and pull them as soon as they hit 140 °F (60 °C).
Apple-wise, a firm, sweet-tart variety holds up under heat. My go-to duo is Honeycrisp for sweetness and a lone Granny Smith for zip. No need to peel; the skins blister into smoky little curls that look gorgeous on the plate. In a pinch, Pink Lady or Braeburn perform beautifully.
Baby potatoes save prep minutes because you can leave the skin on and simply halve them. Choose the tiniest you can find so they cook through at the same rate as the pork. If your produce bin only has larger Yukon Golds, cut them into 1-inch pieces and give them a five-minute head start in the microwave with a splash of water.
Red onion brings color and gentle astringency; yellow onion works but lacks that pop of magenta. Slice half-moons about ¼ inch thick so they soften without turning to mush.
Whole-grain Dijon, olive oil, fresh rosemary, and a whisper of maple syrup form a quick marinade that glazes the chops and seasons the vegetables as everything roasts. If rosemary isn’t your favorite, swap in thyme or sage. Maple syrup can be replaced with brown sugar or even a splash of apple cider for extra autumn vibes.
Finally, keep a lemon handy. A quick squeeze over the hot tray brightens the sweet-savory mix and makes the apples sing.
How to Make Easy Weeknight Pork Chop and Apple Sheet Pan Dinner
Preheat and prep the pan
Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 425 °F (220 °C). Line a large rimmed sheet pan with parchment for effortless cleanup or simply mist it with nonstick spray. The high heat encourages browning; lining prevents the maple glaze from cementing itself to the metal.
Whisk the quick mustard marinade
In a small bowl combine 2 Tbsp whole-grain Dijon, 1 Tbsp maple syrup, 1 Tbsp olive oil, 1 tsp finely chopped fresh rosemary, ½ tsp kosher salt, and ¼ tsp black pepper. The mustard’s acidity tenderizes the pork while the syrup encourages caramelization.
Season the chops
Pat 4 bone-in pork chops dry with paper towels—moisture is the enemy of sear. Brush them on both sides with about two-thirds of the mustard mixture; reserve the rest for the vegetables. Let the chops sit at room temperature while you prep the produce so they cook evenly.
Chop apples and vegetables
Halve 1 lb baby potatoes and core 2 apples, slicing each into 8 wedges. Cut 1 medium red onion into ¼-inch half-moons. Uniform size equals uniform cooking; keep potato halves and apple wedges roughly the same thickness.
Toss vegetables with reserved glaze
In a large bowl combine potatoes, apples, and onion with the remaining mustard mixture plus 1 Tbsp olive oil, ½ tsp kosher salt, and a crack of black pepper. The light oil coat prevents sticking and promotes glossy browning.
Arrange everything strategically
Scatter the potato mixture in a single layer, cut-side down for maximum sear. Nestle the chops in the center, ensuring they touch the pan, not the parchment. Space encourages browning; crowding causes steam.
Roast to perfection
Slide the pan into the oven and roast for 12 minutes. Flip the apples and stir the onions, then roast another 10–12 minutes until potatoes are tender and the pork’s thickest part registers 140 °F. Carry-over heat will nudge it to a safe yet juicy 145 °F.
Rest, squeeze, and serve
Transfer chops to a plate and tent loosely with foil; rest 5 minutes so juices redistribute. Meanwhile squeeze half a lemon over the apple-potato medley and scrape up the gorgeous fond. Plate the chops atop the roasted fruit and vegetables, spooning over those glossy pan juices.
Expert Tips
Thermometer > Timer
Ovens vary and chop thickness fluctuates. An instant-read probe eliminates guesswork and prevents shoe-leather pork.
Dry equals crispy
A paper-towel pat removes surface moisture, the nemesis of that beautiful golden crust.
Cut apples last
Apples oxidize quickly. Slicing them just before tossing prevents unappetizing gray edges.
Use the broiler briefly
For deeper char, switch to Broil during the final 2 minutes, watching closely to prevent sugar burn.
Deglaze for extra sauce
After resting, pour ¼ cup apple cider onto the hot pan and scrape; reduce one minute for a shiny finishing drizzle.
Double the vegetables
Roasted apples and potatoes reheat beautifully for tomorrow’s lunch—cook once, eat twice.
Variations to Try
- Autumn harvest: Trade apples for firm Bosc pears and add 2 cups halved Brussels sprouts.
- Southern comfort: Swap maple for sorghum molasses and season with smoked paprika plus a pinch of cayenne.
- Low-carb option: Replace potatoes with 1-inch cauliflower florets; reduce initial roast to 10 minutes.
- Herb swap: Use 1 tsp dried sage or poultry seasoning if fresh rosemary isn’t handy.
Storage Tips
Cool leftovers within two hours; refrigerate in a sealed container up to 3 days. For best texture reheat in a 350 °F oven for 10 minutes rather than microwaving, which can turn apples mushy. Cooked pork chops freeze well: wrap individually, freeze up to 2 months, and thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.
Make-ahead: Chop potatoes, apples, and onion and store covered in cold water with a squeeze of lemon to prevent browning. Drain and pat dry before proceeding. The mustard marinade keeps 3 days refrigerated, so feel free to double it and use half on chicken later in the week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Easy Weeknight Pork Chop and Apple Sheet Pan Dinner
Ingredients
Instructions
- Preheat: Heat oven to 425 °F (220 °C). Line a large rimmed sheet pan with parchment or mist with nonstick spray.
- Make glaze: Stir together mustard, maple syrup, 1 Tbsp olive oil, rosemary, ½ tsp salt, and ¼ tsp pepper.
- Season pork: Pat chops dry; brush both sides with two-thirds of the glaze. Let stand at room temperature.
- Toss vegetables: In a bowl combine potatoes, apples, onion, remaining olive oil, salt, and pepper plus the reserved glaze.
- Arrange: Spread vegetables in a single layer; nestle chops among them.
- Roast: Bake 12 minutes, stir apples/onions, then bake 10–12 minutes more until pork hits 140 °F.
- Rest & finish: Tent pork 5 minutes. Squeeze lemon over the pan, scrape juices, and serve.
Recipe Notes
Thicker chops stay juicier; if yours vary, check temperature early. Apples may darken under broiler—watch closely for the final 2 minutes if you opt to broil.
