A nice little lemma in commutative algebra says the following (see for instance proposition 5.17 in [Atiyah-MacDonald]):
If $A$ is a Noetherian integrally closed domain, $K$ its field of fractions and $L$ a finite separable extension of $K$, then the integral closure $B$ of $A$ in $L$ is a finite $A$-module.
(One way to prove this is via the trace pairing.)
My question is: Do you know an example where $L|K$ is not separable (but still finite) and this fails, i.e. $B$ is not finitely generated as an $A$-module?