Richard:
If you descend with power, CHTs won't take a precipitous drop. Of course, how you do it depends to a degree on the plane.
In the A-36, if I needed to make a rapid descent, I would reduce MP in a couple steps: from 30" to 25" let it stabilize slightly, then put the nose down to get about 250 fpm (leave the prop and mixture alone). While CHTs would drop slightly, the drop was less than 25 degrees per minute. After a minute, MP back to 21" and lower the nose some more. After a couple minutes, CHTs would go from 380 (my max in cruise) to 340. Once at that temp, if you pull back power more (say to 15") and lower the nose, the CHT drop is very slow. Next step is lower MP again, etc. Once below 156 IAS knots, drop the gear if need be. For a normal descent, I leave MP and mixture where they are in cruise and point it down. I can drop 350 to 400 FPM that way without going into the yellow arc. It's all about not cutting the MP back to idle and dropping. Stepped down power settings will work fine.
In the P-Baron, I can drop a little more quickly because I can apply approach flaps and even drop the gear at a very high indicated air speed-around 178 indicated (I'll have to look at the POH). This adds some drag and lets me get a better rate of descent with power.
If one has a JPI, it's very easy to see what power setting will allow what level of descent without CHTs dropping more than 30 degrees per minute (which seems to be where most folks agree is safe). Once CHTs get in the low 300s, we don't worry about 'em because you can't "shock cool" what ain't hot. Even at idle power, unless it's very cold out, CHTs won't drop precipitously from around 300 degrees unless you're doing something extreme.
If Center wants you do expedite the descent, either give 'em 500 fpm for the first 30 seconds, then 1,000 fpm until you get things stabilized and under control; or pull the nose up below gear speed and drop the gear. With the extra drag from the gear, you can get about 2,000 fpm with cruise power and stay out of the yellow arc. Then, reduce power more after a minute or so. I normally step back MP to 25" 21" 17" and have never gotten a warning form the JPI that CHTs are dropping more than 30 degrees per minute (which is where the JPI comes set from the factory).
I normally call approach pretty far out and ask for a gradual descent. Last weekend I called just west of Abilene coming home to Dallas and got a descent from FL210 to 13,000 PD. Pointed it down without changing anything but pitch. TAS was 210 and ground speed picked up about 15 knots while I came down at 250 fpm. Later, I used 500 fpm with no problem in the Baron.
No more guess work with a JPI or other graphic engine monitor. Don't let old wives tales govern: it's now all right there for you to see. This 2" per minute crap drives me crazy. Had a guy telling me this the other day. After chatting a little, he had no idea how to use his graphic engine equalizer in the plane. After we discussed it, the light came on form him. He'd just been doing this the other way (for years) because that's the way he learned (and there was no graphic engine equalizer then). Never occurred to him to monitor temps in the descent on the JPI. (Won't go into what else he wasn't watching.)
Dave