I tried this technique and lost a gallon of my first cider. I dont think it was the techniques fault but mine since it was slightly under pressure. I then kept on reading some other techniques and remembering the time i worked at a brewery and saw their pasteurization steam room. Here is what i did. I put the bottles i wanted to pasteurize in my empty sink and started to run water over the bottles. When the hot water from my tap got around 160-170. I closed the drain and let my sink fill up so the bottles were submerged. The overall temperature was around 160. I then let them be for about 10 min watching to see how they were doing. For the still screw top wine bottles i saw some bubbling but let them be. For the Carbed swing cap there were some surprises. The gasket on some had been forced/stretched so that some of them were REALLY bubbling. I let the pressure out of those and almost lost some cider to the kitchen ceiling. After that i refilled the sink with hot water from the tap and just let the bottles sit in there and went shopping..... for a few needed homebrew supplies. Came back a few hours later and the sink water was at room temp and the bottles were fine. Put them in the fridge to help them settle.
So far non of them have started to re-ferment.
I am liking this idea, I have ridiculously hot tap water.