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For the Juiciest Pork Chops, Reverse Sear Them...in Your Air Fryer

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Pork chops on a plate with green beans.
Serious Eats / Jen Causey

Made well, pork chops are a juicy, tender cut of meat—but they can just as easily be disappointingly tough and chewy. Because chops come from the loin, a lean cut prone to drying out, it can be difficult to get a good sear without turning the insides into a pile of sawdust. This is even harder to do when you aren’t searing the pork chops on a grill or in a hot pan, and are instead relying on the heat of an oven or air fryer to cook them.

The key to making succulent, flavorful pork chops in an air fryer is to apply a few specific techniques to maximize browning and avoid overcooking. Thanks to its small size and ability to circulate air efficiently, the appliance is a powerhouse that we and many others have come to rely on. To figure out the best way to cook pork chops in the air fryer, we worked with our test kitchen colleague Marianne Williams to methodically test multiple variables until we'd landed on a foolproof method that delivers chops that are juicy and deeply browned. Here are the results.

Pork chops on a plate with green beans.
Serious Eats / Jen Causey

Tips for Preparing Pork Chops in the Air Fryer

For Juicy Pork Chops, Don't Skip the Dry Brine

Dry-brining simply refers to salting and resting your meat before cooking it. As former Serious Eats editor Sasha Marx wrote in his guide to the technique, it is our preferred method for seasoning proteins. Unlike a traditional wet brine—which plumps up the meat with excess water and gets in the way of a good sear—dry-brining results in pork that retains more of its natural juices while browning more quickly and deeply.

Here, we recommend dry-brining your pork chops in a mixture of salt, pepper, dark brown sugar, ground mustard, and smoked paprika for at least an hour, but you can salt them up to 24 hours in advance if you have time to spare. Extra time with the brine won't lead to deeper flavor penetration of most of those spices (you can read more about the science of marination to learn why most flavors don't work their way into the meat), but extra time will allow the salt to penetrate more deeply and will give more time for the surface to dry out, aiding browning in the air fryer. 

Use Bone-in, Thick-Cut Pork Chops

There’s a time and place for thin-cut pork chops, and this is not it. Thin chops can work great with extremely high-heat applications like deep frying and grilling, but an air fryer needs more time to develop that sear and a thin chop will be cardboard by the time that happens.

We want thick, bone-in pork chops instead—look for chops that are at least 1 1/2 inches thick—as they’ll retain their moisture and flavor as they cook. While a boneless cut makes for convenient eating, bone-in pork chops have more fat and connective tissue near the bone, and that fat and connective tissue delivers more juiciness and flavor in the finished chop while insulating the lean loin from being hit with excess heat on all sides. Plus, you wouldn’t want to miss out on gnawing the bone, which is one of the most satisfying parts of eating a pork chop.

Reverse Sear...But in the Air Fryer

Here, we take a page out of Kenji’s reverse-seared technique by starting the pork chops low and slow at 230ºF (110ºC), then finishing them at 400ºF (205ºC) to trigger the Maillard reaction—the chemical reactions that lead to a deeply browned and flavorful exterior. This two-stage cooking process helps first cook the pork chops gently and evenly on the inside while further drying off any surface moisture, setting the stage for a rapid high-heat step that delivers a crisp, brown crust. 

Elevate Your Pork Chops With a Trivet

This is a clever trick Marianne came up with while developing this recipe. She cooks the chops during the initial low-temperature stage without a trivet, giving them more distance from the high heat of the heating element, allowing them to cook more gently. Then, she removes the chops from the air fryer, puts a trivet in the basket, and increases the heat to 400ºF, and adds the pork chops back into the basket. Now elevated, the chops brown more rapidly and evenly due to their proximity to the heating element, as if they were sitting under a broiler.

Set a wire rack inside a rimmed baking sheet. In a small bowl, stir together kosher salt, brown sugar, ground mustard, paprika, and black pepper. Place pork chops on a wire rack and, using paper towels, pat dry. Season both sides evenly with the salt mixture. Refrigerate, uncovered, for at least 1 and up to 24 hours.

Blending seasonings in a bowl and two pork chops on a wire rack set in a rimmed baking sheet.
Serious Eats / Jen Causey

Preheat a 6-quart air fryer to 230°F (110ºC). If needed, pat pork chops dry with paper towels. Brush both sides evenly with olive oil. Place in air fryer basket and cook, flipping halfway through, until an instant-read thermometer registers 110°F (43ºC) for medium, 15 to 18 minutes. Remove pork chops from air fryer and place on a plate (pork will not be cooked through).

Placing two pork chops in an air fryer.
Serious Eats / Jen Causey

Place an air fryer trivet in basket of air fryer and preheat to 400°F (205ºC) for 3 minutes. Brush one side and edges of the pork chops with half of the teriyaki sauce. Place pork chops, sauced-side down, on trivet in air fryer. Brush top side and edges of pork chops with remaining teriyaki sauce. Cook, without flipping, until sauce has caramelized and pork chops are nicely browned and register 130ºF (54ºC) for medium, about 7 minutes. Remove pork chops to serving plates and let rest for 10 minutes before serving. Garnish with chives and smoked flaky salt, if desired, and serve.

Placing a trivet into an air fryer basket and glazing pork chops.
Serious Eats / Jen Causey

Special Equipment

Wire rack, rimmed baking sheet, 6-quart air fryer, air fryer trivet, pastry brush, instant read thermometer

Make-Ahead and Storage

Pork chops can be dry brined up to 24 hours in advance.

Cooked pork chops can be stored in an airtight container for up to 1 day and reheated in the air fryer or microwave until warmed through. 

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