You could put a couple 55gal barrels on there and make some big batches

Have you ever looked into Lube refiners that were used on old semi engines, might still be used, not sure.
I think they were some type of centrifuge, spun out the inpurities from the engine oil as you were driving. Might be various types and not that up on them myself. I recall one from a mid or late 70's Freightliner I think. It leaked and was removed, not needed becuase of the trucks low yearly milage and oil changed each year.
Anyway I think it spun at high speed, dirty oil in spins around a few times, clean oil out, sort of a constant feed. Something like this may work well for removing free water and crud fast. Maybe 2 small tanks, tubing to near the outer end to feed in oil, so dirty oil goes in the outer end, spining cleans the oil, as more dirty oil enters the outer end the cleaner oil is pushed to the center and out a second tube in the center to the clean oil tank. Then you would need a way to clean out the crud also when you stop the spin cycle.
You could control the speed of the spin to what you want. Kinda like spinning an open bucket on a rope and the water stays in upside down, but it is not fast. Slower spin should work well, just not as fast as a faster spin.
How long the oil spins could be controlled by how fast it is feed into the tanks. No feed and all oil tries to stay in the spining tanks, slow oil feed will push the clean oil out slow. Fast feed pushes oil out fast. If you have pretty clean oil use a fast feed, if you have dirty stuff, use a slow feed.
Only thing I am not sure of is how to seal the center connections where spining tubes would connect to non-spinnning tubes. That's always a problem for me, figuring out seals. Like when I build a inboard engine boat and run a shaft out under water, how do I keep water from entering the boat at the shaft??
Perhaps timing chain cover crank seals like for Ford 302 or Chevy 350? Though there realy preventing free leaks, no presure pushing.
That's kinda my thoughts on a centrifuge but to begin with I will stick to heating I think when I begin. I have plans for a heating system that won't use any feul, just build it in as one more part of my charcoal maker, black smith and metal casting setup. If I get it all built the way I plan, there will not be any waste heat escaping from anything. Each part uses heat for it's own purpose, start with the process that makes the most waste heat and feed the exhaust heat to the next process then the next etc... untill it is almost cool air escaping at the end.