Slow-Cooker Pork Medallions

Total Time
Prep: 5 min. Cook: 1-3/4 hours + standing

Updated Aug. 28, 2024

These slow-cooker pork medallions are a simple, low-prep meal for busy days. Start them before you take the kids for their after-school activities, or yourself for errands, and dinner will be done when you get home.

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These slow-cooker pork medallions are a bit of an outlier among our wealth of slow-cooker recipes. Most of those are built around long, slow cooking, the kind of recipes that start at three hours and go up to six or eight. They’re designed to cook meats and vegetables to a lush, meltingly soft texture, and they work really well for fixing tough cuts of meat.

Pork medallion slow-cooker recipes are rare, because tenderloins are the opposite of a classic slow-cooker cut. This isn’t a classic slow-cooker recipe, though. Instead of simmering low and slow all day, it has a cooking time of just around two hours. You can pull it together before those after-school activities with the kids, and dinner will be ready when you get home.

Ingredients for Slow-Cooker Pork Medallions

  • Olive oil: Unlike most slow-cooker recipes, this one includes no added liquids. The oil coats the pork and keeps it from sticking and drying in the slow cooker.
  • Soy sauce: There’s just enough soy sauce in the recipe to thinly coat the pork, giving it a layer of savory umami flavors.
  • Montreal steak seasoning: This popular spice mixture provides a balance of savory, meat-enhancing flavors.
  • Pork tenderloin: Tenderloin is boneless and has no surface fat to trim away, so it’s a no-fuss meal option.
  • Wild rice or mashed potatoes: Serve the finished pork medallions with wild rice for an elegant meal, or with mashed potatoes for a comfort-food vibe.

Directions

Step 1: Combine the seasonings

In a 5-quart slow cooker, mix the oil, soy sauce and steak seasoning.

Step 2: Cook the pork

Add the pork tenderloins and turn them, so they’re coated with the flavoring mixture on all sides. Cook the pork, covered, on low until a thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the tenderloin reads 145°F, 1 hour and 45 minutes to 2 hours and 15 minutes.

Step 3: Slice the pork and serve

Let the pork stand for 10 minutes before slicing it into medallions. Serve the sliced pork over wild rice or mashed potatoes, drizzled with the flavored juices, if you like.

Slow-Cooker Pork Medallion Variations

  • Add a sauce: This recipe will give you a small quantity of cooking juices to enjoy over your pork. Alternatively, you could cook your pork in a flavorful sauce, which gives you a more complete entree. If you have a favorite sauce for pork, by all means use it. If you don’t, browse our slow-cooker pork recipes and find one that appeals to you. Cooking time should remain roughly the same, though you should start checking the pork’s temperature a little earlier.
  • Go Asian: The basic recipe here is very versatile, keeping the flavors savory but not specific to any style of cooking. You can change direction easily, if you wish, by coating the pork in teriyaki or hoisin sauce instead. Swap out the steak spice for 2 tablespoons each of minced garlic and fresh ginger, and cook as directed. To serve, arrange the pork over rice, drizzle extra hoisin over it, and garnish it with toasted sesame seeds or diagonally sliced green onions.
  • Glaze the pork: For a slightly more elegant meal, you can also opt to glaze the tenderloin after it comes out of the slow cooker. Pull the pork from your slow cooker when its temperature is slightly lower, 130° to 140°. Brush it with barbecue sauce, honey-garlic sauce or another glaze of your choice. Grill or broil the pork for two to three minutes on each side, until the glaze caramelizes, then let it rest for a few minutes before slicing.

How to Store Slow-Cooker Pork Medallions

Leftover pork should be packed up in food-storage bags or containers and moved to the refrigerator immediately after the meal.

How long will the leftover pork keep?

You should plan to eat up any leftover pork within three to four days of the original meal.

Can I freeze my slow-cooker pork?

You certainly can. If this recipe makes more than you’ll eat in one sitting, your best bet is to only slice as much as you need for that first meal. The remaining intact tenderloin portions can be wrapped, whole or halved, whichever represents a reasonable serving size for you. Pack the wrapped pork portions into freezer bags or containers, where they’ll keep for one to three months. Slice them after reheating. Sliced pork can also be frozen, but it won’t keep as well and should be eaten within a month.

Slow-Cooker Pork Medallion Tips

Isn’t tenderloin too lean for the slow cooker?

You’re not wrong. The cuts that do well in a slow cooker usually contain some fat and connective tissue, which break down under long, slow cooking. Pork tenderloin doesn’t have those, so it would be dry and unsatisfying in a traditional slow-cooked recipe. At around two hours of cooking time, this recipe goes just long enough for the pork to be cooked through.

Is it really safe to eat pork at that temperature?

It is, yes. The USDA changed its guidance on pork several years ago and considers it perfectly safe when cooked to 145° and given a few minutes of rest. The risk of trichinosis from commercially raised pork is vanishingly small; the few cases seen each year in the U.S. generally come from wild-caught game.

Can I cook the tenderloins from frozen?

That would be really convenient, but sadly, it’s a bad idea. Any meat or poultry going into your slow cooker should be thawed first. Slow cookers are a low-temperature appliance by design. That means if you’re cooking from frozen, your meats are going to spend a long time in the food safety “danger zone” (40° to 140°), where potentially dangerous bacteria flourish best. The added convenience just isn’t worth the risk.

What’s the difference between pork tenderloin and pork medallions?

A “medallion” is just a small, round slice cut from a larger piece of pork. Medallions can be made from a loin, or a tenderloin, or even a trimmed-down piece from a larger cut. The tenderloin itself is a very specific cut, taken from the inside of the hog’s rib cage. It can be cut into medallions, and often is, but it can also be served in many other ways.

Should I sear the tenderloin before it goes into my slow cooker?

You certainly can, if you wish. Heat a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium-high heat, add a splash of oil and brown the tenderloins one at a time on all sides. Then roll them in the flavorings, as directed in the recipe, and cook them as usual. Searing adds flavor to the pork, but it’s very much an optional step. You may choose to skip it, on the basis that it can smoke up your kitchen and spatter your work area with oil.

What keeps my pork from drying out in the slow cooker?

That’s a good question. Most slow-cooker recipes call for one or another liquid, and the steam helps keep meats from becoming dry. This recipe doesn’t call for any liquid other than the splash of soy sauce. What saves the day is the oil, which is less common to see in slow-cooker recipes. The oil coating the surface of the pork limits evaporation and helps keep the pork from drying out.

Watch How to Make Easy Slow-Cooked Pork Tenderloin

Easy Slow-Cooked Pork Tenderloin

Prep Time 5 min
Cook Time 105 min
Yield 6 servings

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon Montreal steak seasoning
  • 2 pork tenderloins (1 pound each)
  • Cooked wild rice or mashed potatoes

Directions

  1. In a 5-qt. slow cooker, mix oil, soy sauce and steak seasoning. Add pork; turn to coat. Cook, covered, on low until a thermometer inserted in pork reads 145°, 1-3/4 to 2-1/4 hours. Let stand 10 minutes before slicing. Serve with cooking juices if desired and wild rice or mashed potatoes.

Nutrition Facts

5 ounces cooked pork: 259 calories, 14g fat (3g saturated fat), 85mg cholesterol, 707mg sodium, 0 carbohydrate (0 sugars, 0 fiber), 31g protein. Diabetic Exchanges: 5 lean meat, 2 fat.

I find simple dinners are the best comfort foods that my family of seven really desires. Everyday, good ingredients are the key to my success in the kitchen. Three ingredients poured over the pork and—voila!—the most mouthwatering pork you have ever tasted! —Grace Neltner, Lakeside Park, Kentucky
Recipe Creator
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