
Chicory salad with goat's cheese, croutons and mustard
:
2
Course
:
Lunch, dinner
Cooking Time
:
20 mins
Prep Time
:
20 mins
Ingredients
150g leftover focaccia, for croutons
2tbs olive oil
Sea salt
2 heads of yellow chicory
2 heads of red chicory
2tsp wholegrain mustard
2tbs good quality olive oil
Juice of half a lemon
Pinch of salt and black pepper
Zest of 1 orange
100g goat's cheese
Start by making the croutons. Preheat the oven to 180 degrees. Thinly slice the focaccia bread and place on a baking tray. Drizzle evenly with olive oil, season with sea salt and place in the oven. Cook for 12 minutes until golden brown, then remove and allow to cool.
Separate the chicory leaves, keeping them whole, and place in a large bowl. Add the mustard, olive oil and lemon juice, and a pinch of salt and pepper and gently mix through the leaves until evenly coated.
Arrange the chicory leaves on a large serving platter. Garnish with the orange zest and crumbled goat's cheese, then top with the focaccia croutons before serving.

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an hour ago
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Our unmarried son living abroad has died just before his first child was born. Who inherits?
Our son recently died unexpectedly in Germany. He had recently taken a mortgage on an apartment with a partner to whom he was not married. She is expecting his child. There was no insurance policy on the mortgage (apparently it's not mandatory in Germany). As far as we can tell, that means we inherit his share of the apartment. Our problem is how can we pass this on to his partner in a tax efficient manner and as quickly as possible? Mr T.F. READ MORE This is a desperately sad scenario. To lose a child is bad enough. When they live in another country, it must only be tougher, not least as your son was about to become a father. It can also make things tricky when it comes to the more prosaic issues like inheritance. Before we go into some of the detail here, it would be remiss of me not to say that you would be well advised to consult someone specialising in German law – specifically inheritance law. 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Usually, but not always, where a couple is buying the home, the mortgage is designed to pay out when the first of them dies. While it can grate that you are confronted with yet another bill to pay at a time when you are trying to maximise how much you can draw down to meet the cost ever more expensive homes in Ireland, in real terms the monthly premium is very modest – and even more so if you shop around. All lenders will facilitate a life policy to cover your mortgage but, in my experience, you will pay a higher premium for precisely the same cover. But I digress. Much to my surprise, in a country known for attention to detail, Germany does not oblige homebuyers to take out such a policy. That alone puts your son's partner in a very tricky position. She will now be responsible for paying this mortgage. And, as this is a recent mortgage, the payments are likely to be substantial. It is very likely that she may have to sell the apartment. 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That being the case, German lawyer Karl-Georg Wellmann of Berlin practice Rath, Wellmann & Feinen says that the 'applicable inheritance law is determined by the deceased's last habitual residence, not nationality. If the deceased's main place of residence was in Germany, German inheritance law applies.' The fact that he is an Irish citizen is immaterial. The real problem for his partner is that, as in Ireland, an unmarried partner has no rights of succession under intestacy. 'Without a will or inheritance contract, the rules of statutory succession apply,' Mr Wellmann notes. 'As the deceased was unmarried, their partner will not inherit anything.' So who does? 'In this case, the heirs are the deceased's children,' Mr Wellmann says. Legally speaking, it apparently does not matter whether the child is born before or after the death of the parent. 'An unborn child is entitled to inherit provided they are born alive,' he adds. And this is critical. 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