Hi Worcester,
that's a very useful site and one I stumbled upon by accident about two months ago. It's no co-incidence, therefore, that my design is based upon designs and hardware from that site. What I have done is to take a solution offered by one of those members and have added additional functionality to it.
The past month or so has been full of week long business trips and I haven't been in a position to finalise my solution and publish it. Rest assured that, with a bit of luck, I will publish something on that site and link to it on here in the coming week or so. The whole point of the site is that it is open source and thus available for anybody to freely use provided written recognition is given to the original designer if code is used.
For those who are interested, and as a simple introduction, if you are reasonably handy with a soldering iron and can follow simple instructions to program a micro controller, it's quite easy to build a controller. Pretty well all of the parts are available at reasonable prices through the open energy monitor site and the software is simply down loadable (the beauty being that the contributors offer what they have written as open source).
For most of us, and I know that this cuts across best practise in the electrical industry, the only rub is intercepting the mains feed to the immersion heater. What many build as a solution may not be seen as industrial enough for a qualified electrician to put his name against installing. It doesn't mean that what is offered for installation is unsafe, far from it. It's just that the mains interface may not always be something that an electrician would naturally buy from a wholesaler. More industrial solutions for the mains interface can be purchased but this does increase the end price somewhat.