Skip to main content

Pork Tenderloin With Jam-and-Mustard Glaze

4.0

(3)

Pork Tenderloin with Jam and Chicories on a white plate with a pan of pork and sauce to the upper left
Photograph by Isa Zapata, Prop Styling by Emma Ringness, Food Styling by Taneka Morris

Jam and Dijon mustard is an IYKYK kind of situation. While the duo may seem an unlikely pair, fated to meet only when stored next to each other in the fridge, they actually belong together as the building blocks of a delightfully tangy sauce. Consider this: You get sweetness and body from the jam and brightness and acidity from the mustard. Add a bit of soy sauce for savory saltiness and a pinch of crushed red pepper flakes for heat and you’re in business, without ever looking beyond what you probably already have stocked in your kitchen.

In this recipe, sharp Dijon and your jam of choice (I love the rich color you get from raspberry but any flavor works) make up the base of a topping for pork tenderloin. This quick-cooking cut is ideal for weeknight dinners. After searing the pork in a hot pan, you’ll build the sauce and then nestle the meat back in, to finish cooking as the fruity mixture thickens. The glaze also pulls double duty as a component for the vinaigrette that is drizzled over a simple salad of delicately bitter radicchio and quick-pickled red onion. It all makes for a flavor-packed 35-minute meal with minimal shopping required.

What you’ll need

Read More
This towering salad—built with the components of a muffuletta sandwich like mortadella and an olive dressing—is ready for a party.
Round out these autumn greens with tart pomegranate seeds, crunchy pepitas, and a shower of Parmesan.
Roasted cabbage wedges get cloaked in a salty-sweet glaze of maple syrup and Dijon mustard before getting topped with crunchy bacon.
Blue cheese lovers, this one's for you. A glossy blue cheese dressing is tossed with radicchio, hazelnuts, and roasted squash for a satisfying fall salad.
A bed of charred cabbage speckled with chopped giardiniera makes the perfect landing place of sweet Italian sausages and plenty of basil.
Braise tender pork belly in soy and vinegar, then grill with shishito peppers and toss with ginger and a tangy dressing for bold, savory Filipino dinakdakan.
A mix of leafy greens turns extremely tender with the simplest treatment. Topped with crispy breadcrumbs, this is proof that boiled vegetables aren’t boring.
The citrus juice and sherry vinegar in the dressing work hard to tenderize the hearty kale and crunchy broccoli slaw as they sit in the fridge.