Power MOSFETs suitable for use in analog circuits have been hard to come by for some time now. As many of you know the amps I use and built use them as the output devices. I found some at a reasonable price from a reliable source and purchased some. Using multiple pairs in the output requires matching. I put together a little test fixture that allows me to take advantage of some test equipment that I have to match them quickly and easily.
The first picture shows the whole setup except the power supply. The digital function generator allows me to output short pulses at variable rates and adjust the output level in .001 Volt steps. The digital scope has the capability of taking a variety of measurements, the two I'm using are high and low.

The device currently under test is an N-channel so I'm pulsing the gate high, yellow, and reading the voltage on the drain, blue. The supply is set to 40 Volts, the load is a 10 Ohm resistor, so a 20 Volt negative pulse is two Amps, 15 Volts is 1.5 Amps and so on. In this picture I haven't dialed in the pulses to be exactly 15 volts.

And this is the test fixture itself, very simple. I diode clamp the drain to the supply and have a .1uF cap from the drain to ground to eliminate ringing. The switch with the black paddle switches between diodes pointing in opposite directions. The switch with the gray paddle turns voltage to the drain on or off. The white connector can be used to connect the fixture to the drain and source of the FET but I found it just as fast to use the clip leads.

A ten microsecond pulse 200 times a second at 2 Amps barely changes the temperature of the FET.
I have a spreadsheet that I record all the results on and helps identify the best matched groups. If you have any interest in seeing it let me know and I'll email it to you.