> I presume meters have a blocking cap built-in somewhere...
As Sluckey says: not all. In particular "passive" VOMs often use an "AC" scheme that reads both AC and DC. Some provide an externally jumperable cap to block DC, many don't.
But even if so: what rating?
My Heath VTVM had a 400V(?) cap. I managed to blow it. Of course a HeathKit is totally repairable. I fixed it with a 1,600V cap. Haven't blown that yet.
But these new meters may call 100V "high voltage". And if you blow it, you may not be able to find it.
Read The Specs.
> don't probe any place in the amp that has more than 300VDC present.
Technically, 300V DC plus 10V peak ripple is 310V, and could be 310V against the 300V rating, which is not allowed.
True, ripple in preamp stages generally must be well under one Volt. And there ought to be some safety margin on the rating; 301V should not be fatal.
Still in all, it is better to use your brain and lever-down. A 1Meg and a 10K resistor from B+ to ground will give 100:1 leverage. The B+ will read like 3V, 10V of ripple will read as 0.1V, and nothing is very stressed. There's little errors this way but around 1%, close enough for jazz. (I know why Sluckey went direct: we were debating a 1% effect, so he wanted to avoid additional differences even at the risk of popping a 'scope input. I think the moral is: don't sweat the small stuff.)