I'm new here, and have both thick skin and a strong sense of humor (for a software engineer)... so please feel free to laugh (at me/with me)
I have a 8g SS milk bottle with a 2" tri-clamp drain/heater port and I'm looking at hot water heaters. Amazon actually has three heating coils (Dernord brand and 4500w, 5500w, and 6500w) that look promising for me as they already have the 2" tri-clamp fitting and they have the American 220v plug right next to the tri-clamp. They look like this
I assume I can add insulation to the boiler area to protect the electrical wire insulation and the 220v plastic plug... maybe no plastic plug and use a hard wired version of the heat elements. If you guys have examples/ideas of what you have done/recommend here I'd appreciate your reply. Hell, even telling me what not to do is fine

To the point of this thread: How do you guys control the power output of the heating element? For safety reasons I'd like an on/off switch as a minimum, AND I think I'd like to use a rheostat so I can regulate the power output (indirectly the heat output). Ive found some rheostat units that can handle 220v and 10000w but they all have a disclaimer "do not use in flammable, explosive and humid environments". So if you use a rheostat what make/model is it? OR do you just switch the element it on (per say to be wide open hot) and then let it rip?
I guess I could find a multi tap transformer, so I have a few fixed outputs to work with, and then there wouldn't be a potential rheostat spark. This seems like it might be overkill, and not knowing what fixed taps I might need is another issue.
Thanks in advance
Brad