Garlic butter pork chops with zucchini land on the plate with the kind of weeknight payoff that makes a plain skillet meal feel special. The pork sears into a deep golden crust while the zucchini picks up the browned butter and garlic from the same pan, so every bite tastes like it had more time and effort than it actually did. The lemon at the end keeps the butter from feeling heavy and gives the whole dish a clean finish.
What makes this version work is the order. The pork needs a hot pan first so it can brown before it cooks through, and the zucchini goes in after that so it can sear instead of turning soft and watery. Garlic goes into the butter at the very end, which keeps it fragrant instead of bitter. That small timing shift is what gives you a skillet dinner that tastes balanced, not greasy.
Below, I’ve included the one detail that keeps the chops juicy, the ingredient swaps that actually hold up, and the spots where people usually rush the pan and lose that nice golden color.
The pork stayed juicy and the zucchini actually browned instead of getting mushy. I loved how the garlic butter came together in the same pan after the chops, and the lemon at the end made it taste bright instead of heavy.
Like this garlic butter pork chops with zucchini skillet? Save it to Pinterest for the nights when you want one pan, golden edges, and a fast dinner that still feels finished.
The Moment the Pork Turns Juicy Instead of Dry
The main risk with pork chops is overcooking them while you chase color. A 3/4-inch boneless chop cooks fast, which is useful only if the pan is hot enough to brown the surface before the center goes gray. You want a solid sear, then a short finish in the garlic butter after the zucchini has had its turn. That last two-minute return to the pan is enough to warm the chops through without pushing them past juicy.
Zucchini has the opposite problem. If it goes in too early, it gives off liquid and steams itself pale. Slicing it into half-inch rounds gives enough surface area for browning while still keeping some bite, and cooking it after the pork means the skillet is already seasoned with the best bits from the meat.
- Pat the pork dry — Moisture on the surface is what blocks browning. A dry chop sears faster and develops a better crust.
- Use medium-high heat for the first sear — Lower heat gives you gray pork and soft zucchini. You want enough heat to hear an immediate sizzle.
- Let the zucchini sit in the pan — If you keep stirring it, it never gets those caramelized edges that make the dish taste finished.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Skillet

- Boneless pork chops — These cook quickly and stay tender when they’re about 3/4 inch thick. Thinner chops work, but they cook faster and are easier to overdo, so shorten the sear time if yours are less than 3/4 inch.
- Zucchini — Fresh, firm zucchini holds its shape and browns nicely. If yours are very large, the centers can turn watery, so cut them a little thicker or scoop out the seedy middle before slicing.
- Olive oil and butter — The oil handles the high-heat sear, and the butter comes in later for flavor. Butter alone would brown too fast at the beginning, which is why the oil is doing the first round of work.
- Garlic, lemon, and parsley — Garlic gives the skillet its backbone, lemon brightens the butter, and parsley keeps the finish fresh. The lemon matters more than it looks on paper; it cuts through the richness and wakes up the whole dish.
- Italian seasoning — This gives the pork and zucchini an easy herbal base without requiring a long spice list. If you don’t have it, use a mix of dried oregano, basil, and thyme.
How to Build the Garlic Butter Without Burning It
Season and Sear the Pork First
Season the pork chops and zucchini before anything hits the pan. Then sear the chops in olive oil over medium-high heat until they’re deeply golden, about 4 minutes per side depending on thickness. Don’t move them around once they’re down; the crust forms when they sit still. If they stick at first, give them another moment — when the browning is ready, they’ll release on their own.
Give the Zucchini Its Own Browning Time
Cook the zucchini in the same skillet after the pork comes out. The pan should already have flavor and color in it, which helps the zucchini brown quickly. Let each side sit long enough to pick up golden spots before turning it. If the skillet looks dry, the zucchini was too watery or the heat was too low; both will keep it from searing.
Finish the Garlic Butter at the End
Push the zucchini toward the edges and melt the butter in the center, then add the garlic and cook it for about 30 seconds. The garlic should smell fragrant, not sharp or brown. If it starts to darken, pull the pan off the heat immediately, because burnt garlic will take over the whole dish. Toss the zucchini through the butter, return the pork, and let everything cook just long enough to warm together.
The Lemon and Herb Finish
Stir in the lemon juice and parsley at the very end. The acid lifts the butter sauce and keeps the pork chops from tasting flat, while the parsley gives the skillet a fresh finish. Serve it with extra lemon wedges so each plate can get one last bright squeeze right before eating.
How to Change It Without Losing the Good Part
Dairy-Free Skillet Version
Swap the butter for another tablespoon of olive oil plus a small splash of dairy-free butter if you use one you trust. You’ll lose a little of the classic rich finish, but the garlic, lemon, and browned pork still carry the dish. Keep the heat moderate when you add the garlic so the alternative fat doesn’t scorch.
Bone-In Pork Chops
Bone-in chops bring more flavor and stay juicy, but they need a longer cook time than boneless ones. Sear them the same way, then give them an extra few minutes after the zucchini goes back in, checking that the center is cooked through before serving. If they’re much thicker than 3/4 inch, finish them covered for a minute or two so the middle catches up.
Add-Ins for a Bigger Meal
Mushrooms, cherry tomatoes, or thinly sliced onions all work well here if you want more vegetables in the pan. Add mushrooms with the zucchini, or add tomatoes at the very end so they soften without breaking down completely. The trick is not crowding the skillet, or everything starts steaming instead of browning.
Low-Carb and Gluten-Free as Written
This recipe is naturally gluten-free and low in carbs as written, so there’s nothing to change for either one. Just check that your Italian seasoning blend doesn’t contain any added fillers if you’re being strict about it. The rest of the dish is built from plain pantry ingredients.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The zucchini softens a bit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: The pork chops freeze better than the zucchini. If you want to freeze it, pack the pork separately and expect the zucchini to come back softer after thawing.
- Reheating: Warm gently in a skillet over low heat with a splash of water or broth, just until the pork is heated through. High heat dries out the chops fast and turns the zucchini limp.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Garlic Butter Pork Chops with Zucchini
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the pork chops and zucchini with salt, pepper, and Italian seasoning to taste, coating the surfaces evenly for better browning.
- Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering, then sear the pork chops for 4 minutes per side until golden.
- Set the seared pork chops aside on a plate while you cook the zucchini in the same pan.
- Add the zucchini to the same pan and cook for 2 minutes per side until golden, letting the cut sides get color.
- Push the zucchini to the edges, add the butter and minced garlic to the center, and cook for 30 seconds until fragrant and bubbling.
- Toss the zucchini in the garlic butter, then return the pork chops to the pan and cook for 2 more minutes to rewarm.
- Finish with the fresh lemon juice and chopped parsley, then serve immediately with lemon wedges.


