Craving something that feels fancy but takes almost no effort? Slow-cooking a single pork tenderloin in a crock pot with apple butter and herbs is the answer.
This dish turns a humble cut into tender, flavor-packed dinner while you do literally anything else. But here’s the catch!
Do a quick sear first to get flavor and texture. Then let the slow cooker finish the job while you relax or pretend to be busy.
Contents
Equipment: Must-haves
- Crock pot (slow cooker)
- Skillet (preferably cast-iron) for searing
- Tongs to flip the pork
- Cutting board for trimming
- Sharp knife for trimming and slicing
- Meat thermometer to check doneness
- Serving platter

Equipment: Nice-to-haves
- Kitchen twine (to truss the tenderloin if you like tidy meat)
- Basting brush (for glazing before serving)
- Silicone spatula for scraping glaze
- Small bowl for mixing sauce

Ingredients
- 1 pork tenderloin (about 1 to 1.25 pound) — the solo star of the show
- 1/2 cup apple butter — sweet, spiced, and slightly magical
- 2 tablespoon Dijon mustard — adds tang and attitude
- 1 tablespoon olive oil — for searing and not for skipping
- 1 clove garlic, minced — tiny but mighty
- 1 teaspoon fresh thyme, chopped — freshness in a leaf
- 1 teaspoon fresh rosemary, chopped — aromatic high-five
- 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika — mild smokiness, big personality
- 1/2 teaspoon salt — the quiet hero
- 1/4 teaspoon black pepper — a little kick
- 1/4 cup low-sodium chicken broth — keeps things saucy
- 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar — brightness that wakes up flavors
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar (optional) — for caramel vibes
- 1 tablespoon butter — for the skillet and a touch of richness
- 1 small onion, thinly sliced — lays down a tasty bed
- 1 sprig fresh rosemary for garnish (optional) — looks fancy

Instructions
- Trim any silver skin or excess fat from the pork tenderloin on the cutting board with the sharp knife.
- Season the pork all over with salt, black pepper, smoked paprika, and half of the chopped thyme and rosemary.
- Heat the skillet with olive oil and butter until shimmering and almost smoking like it’s excited for dinner.
- Sear the pork on all sides until nicely browned; use tongs to rotate so every side gets attention.
- If you want neater results, truss the pork with kitchen twine before transferring it to the crock pot.
- Spread the thinly sliced onion on the bottom of the crock pot to make a cozy flavor bed.
- Place the seared pork on top of the onion bed in the crock pot.
- In a small bowl, whisk together apple butter, Dijon mustard, minced garlic, chicken broth, apple cider vinegar, brown sugar (if using), and the remaining herbs until glossy and slightly saucy.
- Pour the sauce over the pork, using the silicone spatula to scrape every drop from the bowl into the crock pot.
- Cover the crock pot and cook on low for several hours or on high for a shorter time until the pork is fork-tender and the internal temperature reaches the safe range checked with a meat thermometer.
- When the pork is done, remove it to the cutting board and tent loosely with foil; let it rest so juices behave themselves.
- If you want a thicker glaze, skim the crock pot juices into a skillet and reduce over medium heat until glossy, stirring with a spatula.
- Brush the reduced glaze over the sliced pork with the basting brush, or spoon it generously if you’re feeling dramatic.
- Slice the pork into medallions and arrange on the serving platter; garnish with the rosemary sprig and a sprinkle of fresh thyme for looks and bragging rights.

What Else You Should Know
Timing tip: Cooking times vary with size and crock pot heat. Low heat is gentle and reliable.
High heat is for impatient humans. Doneness: Use the meat thermometer to check internal temperature for a safe and juicy result.
Resting the meat keeps juices where they should be. Variation: Swap the Dijon with whole-grain mustard for a rustic texture.
Add a splash of bourbon to the sauce for grown-up warmth. Serving suggestion: Serve sliced pork over mashed potato, buttered egg noodle, or a bed of roasted root vegetable for comfort-level maximum.
Make-ahead: The pork actually tastes better the next day after the flavors marry. Reheat gently and add a little broth if the sauce seems shy.
Leftover love: Use sliced pork in sandwiches, salads, or tacos—yes, pork deserves a second encore. Final tiny secret: searing is worth the five minutes.
It gives texture, flavor, and a reason to feel very proud of dinner.