Yes, the FEAN stack is absolutely feasible. Firebase can indeed replace MongoDB entirely. It depends on your needs of course.
The 'F' in FEAN actually gives you two options: Realtime Database or Cloud Firestore. There are significant differences between the two, so I recommend studying up on those. They will impact performance (and cost, down the line, if you switch to a paid plan). At the risk of oversimplifying, Realtime DB is relatively simple and limited, whereas Firestore attempts to emulate MongoDB's sophisticated querying language and organization into collections.
More resources:
1) https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/rtdb-vs-firestore
2) https://savvyapps.com/blog/firebase-realtime-database-vs-cloud-firestore-for-your-app
Also note that MongoDB and Firebase DBs are not mutually exclusive.
In one of my apps, for example, I am using both, side-by-side. I have a Mongo Cloud Atlas deployment, and make API calls to it via Firebase Functions. So the E and N part of your stack could both be handled by Firebase Functions. Watch their official video for more details: Node.js apps on Firebase Hosting Crash Course.
If you want to go the server-less architecture route, the following stack was surprisingly easy to set up:
F: Firebase Cloud Firestore OR Firebase Realtime Database
E: Express app hosted on Firebase Functions
A: Angular front-end using AngularFire2 package
N: Node app hosted on Firebase Functions
I think you'll find that all these components integrate together nicely.
In my case, I'm running an MFEAN stack. I cache the processed results of my Mongo query in my Realtime Database. This way, I don't have to call my MongoDB over and over for common requests. I can serve those from my Firebase Realtime DB instead, which is crazy fast.