We continue our series of very simple, tasty dishes by preparing Flammkuchen (Tarte Flambée in France, Feuerfleck in Austria). The dish originates from the Alsace. The first part of the name refers to fire and flames. The story is that bakers baked bread in wood fired ovens. The oven would initially become too hot, and the bakers had to wait for the oven to cool and reach the right temperature. The Flammkuchen would be the indicator. If it was ready within two minutes or so, then the temperature was right. If it would burn, the oven was too hot, but nothing was wasted.
The dough of Flammkuchen is extremely simple, but also a bit puzzling. In all cases it’s flour, salt, olive oil and water. Some suggest adding egg yolks, others yeast. Adding yeast makes it into a bread dough. Doesn’t it seem obvious that the bakers would use the already prepared dough? Adding egg yolks seems odd too us. Why make a more expensive dough for a product that was to be used as an indicator only?
Back to yeast or no yeast. Which brings us to the question: isn’t Flammkuchen a kind of pizza? They do look very similar, and both are baked in a hot oven, but there are differences. Traditionally Flammkuchen are covered with crème fraîche, lardons and thinly sliced onions. The Flammkuchen should be very thin and very crispy. We think the bakers didn’t use their bread dough but made a quick, simple dough with the sole aim to test the temperature of the oven. Perhaps only water and flour?
Another difference is that Flammkuchen were not on the menu of restaurants until the 1960’s. Probably you would buy them at the local bakery or make them at home. Thanks to the global popularity of pizza, Flammkuchen have gained some visibility.
Drink Pairing
Flammkuchen are tasty, crispy, flavourful and not complex. Enjoy with a glass of white wine, with a beer, or your favourite drink.
What You Need
- For the Dough
- 250 grams of Flour
- 2 tablespoons of Olive Oil
- 125 ml Water
- Pinch of Salt
- Crème Fraîche
- Black Pepper
- Mushrooms (we used Trompettes de la Mort)
- Red Onion
What You Do
Pass the flour through a sieve. Add a pinch of salt and mix. Add water and olive oil and quickly turn the mixture into a dough using your hands. Don’t kneed too long. Leave on room temperature for an hour. Pre-heat your oven to 220 °C or 430 °F. Roll out until very thin, 2 millimetre is perfect. Add black pepper to the crème fraiche and mix. Place the dough on baking or parchment paper in a baking tray, cover with a layer of crème fraiche, add mushrooms and sliced onion. Bake for 10-12 minutes or so and serve immediately.
Baking Flammkuchen on a higher temperature is preferred, but then you can’t use baking or parchment paper. Best is to use a pizza stone. The baking time will be 3 to 5 minutes on 300 °C or 570 °F.



Thanks for sharing this piece of cooking history and the delicious recipe. It almost sounds like a flatbread that is crunchy. YUM!
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Thanks! Very simple and yummy!
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Was het resultaat naar jullie wens?
Ik ga het zeker eens proberen.
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Ja beslist lekker en zo simpel! Veel bakplezier gewenst.
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Terrific bit of history and a fun and simple recipe as well…you could load it up with anything but your versions sounds perfect with a nice glass of Sauvignon Blanc!
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Indeed, we read one recipe with tomatoes, cheese and anchovies, as if it’s a pizza. We prefer to stay close to the original by using crème fraîche and sliced onions. Cheers!
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I agree that yours is the way to go!
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Thanks John!
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I hadn’t heard of this before, but I love the story and the dish looks quite inviting!
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Thanks Dorothy!
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This is a new one to me and it looks and sounds delicious!
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Thanks Diane, it’s very tasty and easy to make!
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It looks so tasty!
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Thanks!
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Mushrooms and onions and a great story! Who could ask for more?
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Thanks! The Flammkuchen are very simple and tasty!
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Most of the flammkuchen that I have eaten in Alsace was covered with crème fraîche, lardons and thinly sliced onions on a thin crust like yours with no yeast. Thank you for your recipe, it sounds perfect.
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Pleasure! We replaced the lardons with Trompettes de la Mort to have a vegetarian flammkuchen. Plus the colour works very well!
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