Country Fried Pork Chops

Category: Dinner Recipes

Country fried pork chops hit the table with a crust that crackles when you cut into it and juicy meat underneath, which is exactly why this dish keeps its place in a real dinner rotation. The breading stays thick and rugged instead of slipping off in the pan, and the white gravy turns the whole plate into something comforting without drowning out the crunch.

The trick is in the coating: a mix of flour and cornmeal gives you a more textured crust than flour alone, and the buttermilk helps the breading cling in a way plain egg wash can’t. Thin-cut chops cook fast enough to stay tender, and the shallow fry keeps the breading crisp without overcooking the pork. The gravy uses the browned drippings from the pan, so it tastes like part of the same meal instead of an afterthought.

Below you’ll find the small details that make the crust stay put, how to keep the gravy smooth, and a few practical swaps if you need to work with what you have.

The coating stayed on the chops instead of sliding off, and the cornmeal gave the crust that extra crunch I always want. The gravy came together smooth with no lumps, and dinner disappeared fast.

★★★★★— Melissa K.

Love the crunch on these country fried pork chops? Save this one for the nights when you want crispy breading, soft white gravy, and a skillet dinner that feels old-school in the best way.

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The Reason the Coating Stays Crisp Instead of Slipping Off

Most breaded pork chop recipes fail at the same point: the flour layer looks good going into the pan, then it loosens, sheds, or goes patchy because the surface never got enough tack before frying. The egg-and-buttermilk dip here gives the dredge something to grip, and pressing the flour mixture onto the chops matters more than people think. You want a thick, shaggy coating, not a dusting.

Thin chops help, too. Thick pork chops need longer in the pan, which gives the coating more time to soften before the meat is done. With half-inch chops, you can get a deep golden crust in just a few minutes per side and still keep the center juicy.

  • Cornmeal — This is what gives the crust its rough, crunchy edge. All flour works in a pinch, but you lose that distinct country-fried texture.
  • Buttermilk — It adds a little tang and helps the coating cling. If you don’t have it, use milk with a teaspoon of lemon juice or vinegar stirred in and let it sit for 5 minutes.
  • Thin-cut pork chops — These cook fast enough to stay tender. If yours are thicker, pound them lightly to even them out before breading.

What the Flour, Cornmeal, and Drippings Are Each Doing Here

Country Fried Pork Chops crispy breaded juicy
  • All-purpose flour — This is the base of the breading and the backbone of the gravy. Use a regular grocery-store flour here; there’s no payoff in using anything fancy.
  • Smoked paprika, garlic powder, and onion powder — These season the crust all the way through, so the pork doesn’t taste like plain fried breading. Don’t skip them, or the outside reads flat.
  • Drippings — The gravy tastes best when it starts with the browned fat and browned bits left in the skillet. If you don’t have enough drippings, supplement with butter until you have the full amount, then whisk in the flour.
  • Whole milk — This makes the gravy smooth and rich. Lower-fat milk will work, but the sauce thins out a little more and needs a few extra minutes to thicken.

Frying the Chops Until the Crust Sets and the Pork Stays Juicy

Building the Coating

Set up the flour mixture and the egg-buttermilk dip in shallow dishes so the chops can move quickly from one to the next. Dip each chop fully in the wet mixture, then press it into the seasoned flour with enough pressure to make the coating look clumpy and thick. That rough surface turns into crunch in the skillet; a smooth, even coat tends to fry up thinner and softer.

Managing the Oil Temperature

Heat about 1/2 inch of oil over medium-high heat until it shimmers and a pinch of flour sizzles immediately. If the oil is too cool, the breading drinks it up and turns greasy; if it’s too hot, the crust browns before the pork cooks through. Keep the heat steady and adjust it between batches if the pan starts smoking or the coating darkens too fast.

Frying to Deep Golden

Lay the chops in the skillet without crowding them, and leave them alone until the first side turns deep golden and releases with a crisp edge. Flip once and cook the second side until the pork is cooked through and the breading feels set, usually 3 to 4 minutes per side for thin chops. If the crust starts to get too dark before the center is done, lower the heat and finish a minute or two longer.

Turning the Drippings Into White Gravy

Pour off most of the oil, but leave 3 tablespoons of drippings in the pan and scrape up any browned bits. Whisk in the flour and cook it for about a minute so the raw taste is gone, then add the milk slowly while whisking to keep the gravy smooth. If it looks lumpy, the milk went in too fast; keep whisking over medium heat and it usually settles out as it thickens.

Small Swaps That Still Give You a Proper Southern Fried Chop

Gluten-Free Breading

Use a gluten-free all-purpose flour blend in place of the regular flour, and keep the cornmeal in the mix for texture. The crust will still crisp well, but it may brown a little faster, so watch the skillet closely and lower the heat if needed.

Dairy-Free Version

Swap the buttermilk for unsweetened plant milk plus a splash of lemon juice or vinegar, and use butter or a neutral oil in the gravy instead of drippings if needed. You lose a little of the classic tang, but the coating still clings and fries up with good crunch.

Extra-Crunch Country Style

Add an extra tablespoon or two of cornmeal and press the breading on firmly before frying. The crust gets more rugged and shattery, though it also becomes a little more rustic and less smooth.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftover pork chops and gravy separately for up to 3 days. The crust softens in the fridge, which is normal.
  • Freezer: The pork chops freeze better than the gravy. Wrap the cooled chops tightly and freeze for up to 2 months; the gravy can separate, so I don’t recommend freezing it.
  • Reheating: Warm the chops on a rack in a 375°F oven until hot, not in the microwave, which turns the breading soggy. Reheat the gravy slowly on low heat with a splash of milk, whisking until smooth.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use bone-in pork chops?+

You can, but they need more time in the skillet and usually a lower heat so the breading doesn’t darken before the pork cooks through. Thin boneless chops are easier for this method because they brown fast and stay juicy without overcooking.

How do I keep the breading from falling off?+

Press the flour mixture onto the chops firmly and let them sit for a few minutes before frying so the coating hydrates and sticks. If you move them too soon or flip too often, the crust is more likely to slide right off in pieces.

Can I bake these instead of frying them?+

You can bake them, but the crust won’t get the same shattering crispness you get from hot oil. If you go that route, brush the coated chops with oil and bake them on a rack so air can circulate underneath.

How do I know when the pork chops are done?+

For thin chops, 3 to 4 minutes per side is usually enough, but the best check is internal temperature. Pull them when they hit 145°F in the center, then let them rest a couple of minutes so the juices settle back into the meat.

Can I make the white gravy ahead of time?+

Yes, but it thickens as it sits, so you’ll need to whisk in a little milk when reheating. Warm it gently over low heat; high heat can make it tighten up and turn grainy.

Country Fried Pork Chops

Country fried pork chops with a crunchy cornmeal-flour crust that turns deep golden and shatteringly crisp. Pan-fried breaded pork chops are topped with classic white gravy for Southern comfort food style.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Southern American
Calories: 620

Ingredients
  

pork chops
  • 4 thin-cut pork chops (1/2 inch thick) Pat dry for better breading adhesion.
breading
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 0.25 cup cornmeal
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 0.25 cup buttermilk
  • oil for frying Use enough to come about 1/2 inch up the pan side.
white gravy
  • 3 tbsp drippings Reserve 3 tablespoons from the cooked chops.
  • 3 tbsp flour Whisk into drippings to make the roux.
  • 2 cup whole milk Add slowly and simmer until thick.
  • salt and pepper Season to taste for the gravy.

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Make the breading
  1. Mix flour, cornmeal, garlic powder, smoked paprika, onion powder, salt, and pepper in a shallow dish to form the seasoned coating.
  2. Whisk eggs with buttermilk in another dish until smooth and uniform.
Bread the pork chops
  1. Dip each pork chop in the egg mixture, letting excess drip back into the dish.
  2. Coat the pork chops in the seasoned flour mixture and press firmly so the crust clings tightly.
Fry until crisp
  1. Heat 1/2 inch of oil in a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat until hot.
  2. Fry pork chops 3–4 minutes per side until deep golden and cooked through, flipping once.
  3. Drain the pork chops on paper towels and reserve 3 tablespoons of drippings for the gravy.
Prepare the white gravy
  1. Whisk 3 tablespoons flour into the reserved drippings over medium heat for 1 minute to cook off the raw flour taste.
  2. Slowly whisk in whole milk, then simmer until thick.
  3. Season the gravy with salt and pepper and serve it over the country fried pork chops.

Notes

For maximum crunch, keep the oil at a steady medium-high heat so the crust browns during the 3–4 minute per-side window. Store leftovers covered in the fridge up to 3 days; reheat in a 400°F oven just until hot to help re-crisp, though the crust will soften somewhat. Freezing is not recommended because the breading loses its crunch after thawing. For a lighter option, use whole milk gravy with reduced-fat milk (expect a slightly thinner gravy) and cook the chops in a thinner oil layer for less overall oil use.

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