Noun
pork chop (plural pork chops)
A loin cut taken perpendicular to the spine of the pig, usually a rib or part of a vertebra.
This is worse than Hollywood, he thought. A girl comes in with a pork chop and I write a song for her. Eva Ibbotson
My husband cooks fancier food for himself than I've ever cooked on-air. I call him from the road, and he's making champagne-vanilla salmon or black-cherry pork chop. Half of me is feeling unworthy. Not only am I not a chef, I'm not a better cook than my own husband! Rachael Ray
A pork chop over fire versus the same pork chop in the pressure cooker. Source: Internet
A boneless pork chop has about per serving and 23 grams of protein. Source: Internet
However, the pork chop Milanese ($17), pounded thin and served to fill the plate, with a crisp veneer of breadcrumbs and cheese, hits the mark, especially when accented with light lemon garlic vinaigrette and more lemon that diners can squirt. Source: Internet
I ordered the "special" which was a pork chop with some sort of parmesan or other cheese topping. Source: Internet