Slow Cooker Apple Butter Glazed Pork Tenderloin

Category: Dinner Recipes

Slow cooker pork tenderloin can turn bland fast, but this version stays juicy and gets a glossy, tangy-sweet glaze that clings to every slice. The apple butter gives the sauce body, the Dijon keeps it from tasting flat, and the vinegar cuts through the sweetness so the whole dish tastes balanced instead of sticky.

The trick is treating the tenderloin gently. Pork tenderloin is lean, so it doesn’t want a long bath in liquid or aggressive heat. A short cook on low, plus a quick rest before slicing, keeps the meat tender and lets the glaze settle into that shiny coating you want on the plate.

Below you’ll find the small details that matter most here: how to keep the sauce from getting muddy, why the apple cider or broth goes around the pork instead of over it, and a few smart swaps if you want to work with what you’ve got.

The glaze thickened up beautifully in the slow cooker and the pork sliced so cleanly after a short rest. I loved how the apple butter and Dijon played together without making it too sweet.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this slow cooker apple butter glazed pork tenderloin for a tender, glossy main dish with almost no hands-on work.

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The Part That Keeps Pork Tenderloin Juicy in the Slow Cooker

Pork tenderloin dries out when it sits too long, especially in a slow cooker where people assume more time automatically means better texture. It doesn’t. The goal here is to cook just until the center reaches 145°F, then stop. That leaves the meat juicy and sliceable instead of chalky and stringy.

  • Low heat is the safer path. Four to five hours on low gives the tenderloin time to cook through without tightening up too fast. If your slow cooker runs hot, start checking early.
  • The liquid belongs around the pork, not under a bath of sauce. Too much liquid on top can wash away the glaze and mute the apple butter. The cider or broth helps create steam and keeps the cooker from running dry.
  • Resting matters even here. A five-minute rest gives the juices a chance to settle so the first cut doesn’t spill everything onto the cutting board.

What the Apple Butter, Dijon, and Vinegar Are Each Doing

Slow Cooker Apple Butter Glazed Pork Tenderloin sweet savory glossy
  • Apple butter — This is the backbone of the glaze. It brings concentrated apple flavor and enough thickness to cling to the pork. Unsweetened applesauce won’t give you the same body or caramelized depth.
  • Dijon mustard — Dijon sharpens the sauce and keeps the sweetness in check. Yellow mustard is too blunt here; if that’s all you have, use a little less and expect a flatter result.
  • Apple cider vinegar — The vinegar wakes up the glaze and keeps it from tasting heavy. You can use white wine vinegar in a pinch, but apple cider vinegar fits the apple butter best.
  • Soy sauce — Just a small amount deepens the color and adds savory saltiness. It doesn’t make the dish taste Asian; it makes the glaze taste finished.
  • Apple cider or chicken broth — Cider gives a softer apple note, while broth keeps the sauce more savory. Both work; cider gives a slightly sweeter finish.

Building the Glaze Without Losing the Pork

Seasoning and Coating

Pat the tenderloin dry, then season it with salt and pepper before it goes into the slow cooker. Whisk the glaze ingredients until smooth and spoon or brush them all over the pork so the surface is coated evenly. If the glaze looks separated, keep whisking; apple butter needs a little encouragement to blend with the vinegar and mustard.

Slow Cooking With Control

Set the pork in the cooker and pour the cider or broth around it, not over the top. That keeps the glaze where you put it and prevents the top from tasting watered down. Cook on low for 4 to 5 hours or on high for 2 to 2.5 hours, but start checking the temperature early because tenderloin can go from perfect to dry fast.

Resting and Slicing

Pull the pork when it hits 145°F in the thickest part and let it rest for 5 minutes before slicing. Slice across the grain into thick pieces so the meat stays tender and doesn’t shred. Spoon the sauce from the slow cooker over the top right before serving, then finish with fresh thyme for a clean, fragrant hit.

How to Adapt This Apple Butter Pork for Different Tables

Make it dairy-free without changing a thing

This recipe is naturally dairy-free as written, so you don’t need any special swaps. The glaze still comes out rich because the apple butter and mustard do the work that cream or butter would do in a different sauce.

Use broth if you want a less sweet finish

Chicken broth gives the sauce a savory edge and keeps the apple butter from taking over. If you use cider, the glaze comes out a little rounder and sweeter; both versions work, but broth is the better choice when serving mashed potatoes or other rich sides.

Swap pork loin only if you watch the clock

Pork loin is thicker and less delicate than tenderloin, so it can handle a longer cook, but it also needs more time to get tender. If you use it, check for doneness with a thermometer and don’t rely on the clock alone, since overcooked loin turns dry faster than people expect.

Store the leftovers with extra sauce

Slice the pork before chilling it so it reheats evenly, and keep the sauce with it to protect the meat from drying out. Refrigerate for up to 3 days. Freeze the sliced pork with some sauce in a freezer-safe container for up to 2 months, then thaw in the fridge before reheating gently in a covered pan over low heat or in the microwave at reduced power.

The Things That Trip People Up With This Dish

Can I cook this on high instead of low?+

Yes, but low gives you more control and a juicier result. On high, start checking early because tenderloin can dry out once it passes the target temperature. Pull it as soon as the center hits 145°F.

How do I know when the pork tenderloin is done?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and check the thickest part of the tenderloin. You’re looking for 145°F, then a short rest. If you wait for it to get much hotter in the slow cooker, the meat starts to lose the tenderness that makes this cut worth using.

Can I use pork loin instead of pork tenderloin?+

You can, but pork loin is thicker and usually needs longer cooking time. It also has a firmer texture, so the finished dish won’t slice quite as tender. Check the temperature rather than trusting the timer alone.

How do I keep the glaze from tasting too sweet?+

The Dijon and apple cider vinegar are what balance the apple butter, so don’t skip either one. If your apple butter is very sweet, add another teaspoon of vinegar to sharpen the sauce. A small splash of soy sauce also helps the glaze taste deeper instead of sugary.

How do I reheat leftovers without drying them out?+

Reheat the sliced pork gently with some of the sauce, either covered in a skillet over low heat or in the microwave at reduced power. High heat pulls the moisture out fast, especially with lean tenderloin. If the sauce has thickened in the fridge, loosen it with a spoonful of water or broth before warming.

Slow Cooker Apple Butter Glazed Pork Tenderloin

Slow Cooker Apple Butter Glazed Pork Tenderloin with a sweet-savory glaze and juicy slices. Cook until tender and reach 145°F, then spoon the flavorful sauce over the finished pork.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 4 hours
resting 5 minutes
Total Time 4 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Pork and seasoning
  • 2 lb pork tenderloin
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • 0.25 tsp black pepper
Apple butter glaze
  • 0.5 cup apple butter
  • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 clove garlic minced
  • 0.5 tsp cinnamon
  • 0.25 tsp nutmeg
Cooking liquid and garnish
  • 1 cup apple cider or chicken broth
  • 1 fresh thyme for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 slow cooker

Method
 

Season and mix the glaze
  1. Season the pork tenderloin all over with salt and black pepper.
  2. Whisk together apple butter, Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, soy sauce, minced garlic, cinnamon, and nutmeg until smooth.
Slow cook and glaze
  1. Place the pork in the slow cooker and pour the apple cider or chicken broth around it.
  2. Brush the apple butter glaze generously all over the pork so the surface is coated.
  3. Cook on low for 4–5 hours or high for 2–2.5 hours, until the internal temperature reaches 145°F, and the glaze looks glossy and thickened.
Rest, slice, and serve
  1. Let the pork rest for 5 minutes before slicing so juices redistribute.
  2. Spoon the remaining sauce from the slow cooker over the sliced pork and garnish with fresh thyme.

Notes

For best flavor, make sure the pork is fully coated with the glaze before cooking; baste once if your cooker runs hot. Store leftovers in a sealed container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days; reheat gently until warmed through. Freezing is yes—freeze sliced portions with a bit of sauce for up to 2 months and thaw in the fridge overnight. For a gluten-free swap, use gluten-free soy sauce.

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