
Mushroom Flatbread with Thyme, Garlic & Fontina
Earthy mushrooms echo the savory side of almost any red, while melted cheese and olive oil soften tannin without overwhelming the wine's fruit — which is why it pairs as easily with a firm Cabernet as a delicate Pinot Noir.
Equipment
- Skillet
- Baking Sheet
- Pastry Brush
Ingredients
- 1 store-bought flatbread or naan Stonefire, Trader Joe’s, or similar
- 8 oz mushrooms cremini, mixed wild, or shiitake, sliced
- 1 small shallot or ½ small onion thinly sliced
- 1 garlic clove finely minced
- 1 –1½ cups shredded Fontina or low-moisture mozzarella
- Olive oil
- Fresh thyme or ½ tsp dried
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- Optional finish: shaved Parmesan truffle oil, or balsamic glaze
Instructions
Sauté the mushrooms
- Heat a skillet over medium-high with olive oil. Add mushrooms and a pinch of salt. Cook until well browned and moisture evaporates (important for depth of flavor).
- Add aromatics
- Add shallot and cook 2–3 minutes until soft. Add garlic and thyme; cook 30 seconds. Season with pepper. Remove from heat.
- Assemble
- Place flatbread on a baking sheet. Brush lightly with olive oil. Scatter cheese evenly, then top with mushroom mixture.
- Bake
- Bake at 425°F / 220°C for 10–12 minutes, until cheese is melted and edges are crisp.
- Finish
- Optional light drizzle of truffle oil or balsamic glaze; add Parmesan if desired.
Notes
Easy Variations
- Brie version: Swap half the cheese for Brie added in the last 3 minutes of baking
- No-cook upgrade: Use pre-sautéed mushrooms from the deli or freezer section
If Fontina is unavailable, good substitutes (same melt + flavor profile):
-
- Gruyère (slightly nuttier)
- Low-moisture mozzarella (milder, more neutral)
- Havarti (soft, buttery, easy to find)
Wine Notes
This flatbread is a pairing chameleon, and that is by design. Three things drive it: the earthiness of the mushroom, the lactic cream of warm brie, and the faint char of the crust. Earth gives a red wine something to echo. Cream softens tannin and asks the wine not to be too austere. Char rewards a little fruit. That combination flexes further than almost any dish I pair. A structured red like Cabernet Sauvignon finds its firm tannin rounded by the brie, so the wine reads softer and more generous beside the flatbread than it does on its own. A delicate red like Pinot Noir goes the other way — the mushroom meets its forest-floor note directly, and the fine tannin settles against the cream instead of fighting it. The same plate, two different conversations. It does not stop at red. A dry sparkling wine cuts the richness and resets the palate between bites. An oaked Chardonnay matches the cream and the char without strain. Even a dry Alsatian white earns its place when the mushrooms are generous. Serve reds slightly cool — around 60–65°F (15–18°C), just below room temperature — so the fruit stays lifted and the wine doesn't turn heavy against the warm cheese. Whites and sparkling, well-chilled but not ice-cold, so their aromatics aren't muted. Something to pour slowly and savour while it's still warm from the oven. Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!
