This is just my opinion, not the way things should be, but I wouldn’t want to own and fly an aircraft I haven’t landed power at idle from different altitudes many times until it became routine. The beauty of owning it is you get to play with it as you see fit. Shock cooling isn’t a big concern in my mind for the amount you’d be doing, and a small price to pay for getting a visual approximation of how it lands with the stove out.
Just putt at a modest power setting for a bit with the mixture rich on a temperate day before throttle to idle. All those training school engines survive hundreds of PFL circuits done with full power climbs, a short downwind, then idle descents. Our engines can survive a dozen on a temperate day treated gently, and the practice is cheap insurance given the stakes.
My Wilga on floats dropped at the same rate the helis at the day job do, and I found I had to carry 20 more knots into the flare to touch at the same speed without rushing things at the bottom. It was a surprise to learn I needed that much extra speed to make it comfortable, and I wouldn’t have known without trying it. It was a lot easier to come down at a higher airspeed, pull flap once the spot was made, then trade speed for height to a soft touch on the water.
You only figure these things out through trying them, and since the engine is running, you get the option to say ‘Nope’ and try something else.