warm in 96%-100% sulfuric acid to 70°C and hold, moniter by tlc.
Quench onto excess ice/water- filter or extract product
Certainly works fine for aromatic nitriles to amides.
This is one of many ways to do it. We calculated the amount of water present in the sulfuric acid to add to the (protonated) nitrile. (I kind of doubt that was actually true, but that was how we did them.)
The difficulty of hydrolyzing nitriles under acidic conditions is because the amide is more basic than the starting nitrile. Once water adds to the nitrile, the amide is protonated more easily and results in its hydrolysis. I believe the success of the sulfuric acid hydrolysis is its ability to limit the amount of water available.
If you do the hydrolysis under basic conditions, you are more likely to have an incomplete hydrolysis. Success requires formation of the dianion of the hydroxide addition product in order to expel the anion of ammonia. This would be an uphill reaction otherwise. However, from the dianion, the weakest base is now the amide anion (the anion of ammonia). Since the carboxamide is the intermediate, if the hydrolysis conditions are not too harsh, it will be the major product. If you do the hydrolysis aggressively (large excess of concentrated base, and heat), it will go all the way to the carboxylate.
There is a simple variation of the base catalyzed hydrolysis that is perhaps simpler, use base (carbonate?) and peroxide. The peroxide anion adds to the nitrile to give a per-imidate. This can decompose to oxygen and an amide. The perimidate can also be a mild peracid equivalent. If I recall correctly, this is a Payne oxidation (or something like that).