For an ordinary convulsive attack in the case of a child, hold the child's head over a basin and pour tepid water (blood heat, 98 deg.
Put water in this one inch deep, and at blood heat--that is, just to feel warm to an ordinary hand.
The lather is to be blood heat, and very soft and creamy.
The cloths should be just a little below blood heat.
Blood heat: The temperature which the blood is always found to maintain, or ninety-eight degrees of Fahrenheit's thermometer.
The fittest temperature for drinks, if taken when the food is in the digesting process, is blood heat.
Let it have all the first drawn milk for three days as soon as milked; after this, skimmed milk warmed to blood heat.
If this process of aeration is carried out at blood heat, the result is generally highly satisfactory.
We have seen that the milk should first of all be aerated at blood heat, so as to liberate objectionable odours, after which it should be cooled to as low a temperature as possible, by means of well water.
The reason for going to blood heat is because rennet is most active at this point.
The pepsin or gastric juice is more potent at blood heat, and this pepsin or rennet is what does the work.
Dissolve half a small cake of compressed yeast in a cup of thin cream which has been previously warmed to blood heat, add two cups of warm flour, and beat thoroughly together.
Turn it into a large earthen bowl, add a tablespoonful of salt and two of white sugar, and when it has cooled to blood heat, add one half cup of lively yeast, stirring all well together.
Scald a cup of thin cream and cool to blood heat, add one and a half cups of sifted white flour, one fourth of a cup of sugar, and a gill of liquid yeast or one half cake of compressed yeast dissolved in a gill of thin cream.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "blood heat" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.