Butter a cold dish with cold butter, and sprinkle the bottom and sides with sifted cracker, pour in the mixture, grate nutmeg over the top and then sprinkle it with pounded cracker, sift white sugar over, and bake it forty minutes.
If it boils in thirty or forty minutes it is soon enough.
Bake from twenty to forty minutes as suits the consistency of the species.
Turn it into a buttered pudding-dish and bake in a moderate oven for thirty to forty minutes; or, put the mixture into buttered paper cases, filling them one half full, and bake ten to fifteen minutes.
Place it in a deep saucepan; cover with stock or boiling water, and simmer for thirty to forty minutes, or until tender.
Bake in a moderately quick oven, thirty or forty minutes.
For most varieties of cheese, sufficient rennet extract or pepsin is added to the milk to give a firm curd in twenty-five to forty minutes.
Rennet enough is added (see Chapter V) to curdle in thirty to forty minutes, although some makers shorten the time to twenty minutes.
The process of cooking takes from thirty to forty minutes, and at the end of that time the degree of toughness may be determined by making a roll of curd in the hand, and noticing the break when it is given a quick flip.
When it sets in a hard ball cover it with a damp cloth and allow it to sweat for thirty or forty minutes.
Have oven moderate and it will bake in thirty or forty minutes.
Cover the baking dish and bake forty minutes or more, uncover and brown.
Bake in loaf in a moderate oven thirty or forty minutes.
Mix well, fill pie tins which have been lined with pie crust and bake from thirty to forty minutes.
Seal and cook from twenty to forty minutes according to weight.
Seal up tight and cook from thirty-five to forty minutesin a very hot oven.
Seal and cook from thirty-five to forty minutes in a hot oven.
Put all together, except the flour, and let simmer thirty or forty minutes, adding enough boiling water from time to time to keep the original quantity.
Grease a baking-pan, turn in the mixture, and bake thirty-five to forty minutes.
And if you do not join me in forty minutes I walk straight to your lodgings and take my chance.
Lose or win, if you hear nothing of me, you march forwards and occupy Queen's Square in forty minutes.
If I do not return, or send, in forty minutes by your watch, you must follow.
Five-and-forty minutes, and I ask you if this is not a sporting hunt.
Whyte Melville says, "Forty minutes over an enclosed country establishes the partnership of man and beast in relation of confidence.
Forty minutes, however, was too long a time for Hubert, and he returned again to the deck, to seek a companion and inquire what he intended to do, before he sat down to write himself.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "forty minutes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.