Jerry- I think it's terrific if it has worked for you. However I remain more than skeptical.
The original post states a blank with warp and twist. If you had a 1/4" twist just across the butt section of a typical thick blank you would be hard pressed to clamp it down, indeed most people wouldn't have a bench stiff enough to even do so, and straightening a twist in the butt you would be introducing stress/twist in the thinner wrist area of a blank.
Even bending an english gripped double shotgun with it's thin wrist requires a fair amount of heat, encircling the wrist, usually combined with hot oil, and that's a comparatively easy to bend wood. Maple is a difficult wood to bend, and even with a steam chamber it would have to be in their an hour plus to soften.
Clamping one side flat and heating the opposite side as you first suggested would never heat all the way through. Wood is an awful conductor of heat, and the bench would serve as a heat sink drawing out any heat on that side anyway.
Forcing out a twist/warp/cup is also much more likely to reoccur also, since that is where the wood wants to be.
The commercial hardwood industry would have adopted such practices long ago- they literally would gain Billions in profits from it, not to mention the woodworking industry would benefit similarly as well.
Hope you take this post in the spirit in which it was written. The beauty to me of Forums such as this is getting thoughts/ideas/opinions out there for all to decide. This post started from someone looking for advice, which is more important to help rather than delve into any pedantics.