Ingredients
(Serves 4 generously)
The Heart of the Dish:
• 4 boneless pork chops (1–1.5 lbs total; ¾-inch thick)
→ Pro tip: Look for chops with slight marbling—fat = tenderness
• 1 (1 oz) packet dry onion soup mix (Lipton or generic)
• 2 cups low-sodium chicken broth (warmed 1 minute)
• 1 (10.5 oz) can condensed cream of mushroom soup (regular, not reduced-fat)
The Finishing Touch:
• 8 oz wide egg noodles (standard cut—not quick-cook)
• Kosher salt & black pepper (to taste after combining)
• Optional: Fresh parsley, finely chopped
(Equipment: 4–6 qt slow cooker, medium pot for noodles)
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Layer with intention
Place pork chops in a single layer at the bottom of the slow cooker (overlap slightly if needed). Sprinkle onion soup mix evenly over chops, letting excess fall between them.
2. Build the gravy
In a bowl, whisk warmed broth and mushroom soup until smooth. Pour gently over chops to avoid washing off seasoning. Do not stir.
3. Cook low and slow
Cover tightly. Cook:
→ LOW 6–7 hours (ideal for fork-tender, easy-shred pork)
→ HIGH 3–4 hours (if short on time—check at 3 hrs)
⚠️ Do not lift lid before 5 hours (LOW)—steam is essential for tenderness.
4. Prepare noodles
25 minutes before serving:
→ Bring salted water to boil in medium pot
→ Cook noodles 1 minute less than package directs (they’ll finish in gravy)
→ Drain thoroughly; set aside
5. Unite gently
→ Use two forks to shred pork directly in slow cooker (keep pieces rustic)
→ Stir gently into gravy until combined
→ Fold in drained noodles; cover
→ Let rest on WARM 5–10 minutes (noodles absorb sauce without softening)
→ Taste; adjust salt/pepper if needed
Pro Tips & Wisdom
✅ Pork perfection: Pat chops dry before layering—helps seasoning adhere
✅ No peeking rule: Every lifted lid adds 15 minutes to cook time
✅ Gravy too thin? Simmer uncovered 10 minutes after shredding pork
✅ Make ahead: Cook pork/gravy up to 24 hours ahead; refrigerate. Reheat on LOW 1 hour before adding noodles
✅ Freezer-friendly: Freeze cooled pork/gravy (without noodles) up to 3 months. Thaw overnight; reheat and add fresh noodles
Flavor Variations (Honoring Tradition)
→ Garden harvest: Stir in 1 cup frozen peas with noodles
→ Herb-kissed: Add 1 tsp dried thyme to gravy before cooking
→ Creamier finish: Stir 2 tbsp sour cream into gravy after shredding pork
→ Gluten-conscious: Use GF egg noodles + GF cream of mushroom soup (Pacific Foods)
Serving Ritual
→ Classic: In warmed bowls with crusty buttermilk biscuits for dipping
→ Amish style: Alongside stewed apples and steamed green beans
→ Comfort duo: With a simple arugula salad dressed in lemon vinaigrette
→ Leftover magic: Next-day slices pan-fried until edges crisp
Allergy Information
• Contains: Wheat (noodles, soup), Dairy (soup), Eggs (noodles)
• Check labels for: Soy (in soup/onion mix)
• Dairy-free option: Vegan cream of mushroom soup + omit sour cream variation
Always verify ingredient labels for cross-contamination.
Nutrition Facts (per 1½-cup serving)
Calories: 495 • Protein: 32g • Fat: 22g (Sat: 8g) • Carbs: 42g • Fiber: 2g • Sugar: 3g • Sodium: 820mg
Rich in B6, Selenium, and Phosphorus
There’s quiet grace in recipes that honor restraint. This dish doesn’t demand fancy tools or hard-to-find ingredients. It asks only that you trust the process: the gentle steam under the lid, the quiet transformation of onion soup mix into golden gravy, the patience to cook noodles separately so every bite stays perfect.
This is the bowl Amish grandmothers set before their families after a day in the fields—no fanfare, just nourishment. The kind that makes someone sigh, "I needed this," before taking the first spoonful. The kind that leaves the slow cooker nearly clean, with only a few drops of amber gravy clinging to the sides—and someone reaching for bread to soak up every last bit.
So make this on the Tuesday that feels too long. For the friend recovering from illness. For the moment you realize:
Comfort isn’t complicated.
It’s onion soup mix and egg noodles,
and the courage to slow down.
One last whisper: Finish with a tiny sprinkle of flaky sea salt over the bowl. That subtle contrast? It’s the difference between good—and unforgettable.
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