Put a leg of beef and a scrag of mutton cut in pieces into three or four gallons of water, and let them boil twelve hours, occasionally stirring them well; and cover close.
To four gallonsof water put a sufficient quantity of common salt; when quite dissolved, to bear an egg, four ounces of saltpetre, two ounces of bay salt, and half a pound of coarse sugar.
To four gallons of boiling water, add a peck of damsons; stir this liquor twice every day.
If one ounce of powdered roche-alum be put into a cask of four gallons of wine, it will make it fine and brisk in ten days.
Seven pounds of coarse salt, Five pounds of brown sugar, Half an ounce of pearl-ash, two ounces of saltpetre, Four gallons of water.
One hundred pounds of beef, Six pounds of coarse salt, Two ounces and a half of saltpetre, One pound and a half of sugar, Four gallons of water.
Boil two gallons of wheat and an ounce of alum in four gallons of water; strain through a fine sieve; dissolve half a pound more of alum and white tartar; add three pounds of madder, then put in the silk at a moderate heat.
If the weather be cold, and the apples do not ripen so fast as you wish, then add every twelve hours, four gallons boiling, or warm water, which will ripen them if the weather be not too cold in four days at farthest.
Take four quarts of Honey, good measure; put to it four Gallons of water, let it stand all night, but stir it well, when you put it together.
To four Gallons of water put one Gallon of honey, and boil it a little to skim and clarifie it.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "four gallons" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.