If your still interested, I'll add a comment. In looking at a large electrical generating steam turbine rotor, figure about 450 hp output per blade. Usually the steam is reheated, (sent back to the boiler) between the HP and IP turbine stages to replace the heat removed in the steam in generating the horsepower in the HP. (The pressure is not increased, only the lost heat is replaced. This is done to insure that the steam is, and remains dry, with no water droplets able to form as it expands through the turbine. Moisture in the steam errodes the blading as quickly as sandblasting.)
To answer your question about stopping the steam quickly, yes it is done. A large steam turbine driving a 2 pole generator at 60 cycle electrical output operates at 3600 rpm. If the generator is tripped, (disconnected) and the steam is not instantly removed, the turbine will over speed and destory itself in "10 cycles of electricity", or 1/6th of a second. In the case of a 800 megwatt machine, this destuction is equivilant to a 747 flying crashing into something at 500 mph. Consequently as soon as any overspeed beyond 3600 rpm (3610 rpm) is detected by the equipment, various steam valves start reacting immediately. This action increases at a faster pace as the overspeed condition increases. There are several valves, one at the boiler to shut off the steam going to the turbine. Another at the boiler to shutoff the steam that has been reheated from the HP and is being returned to the IP turbine. And another set at the turbine steam inlet. These systems are designed to be extremely fail safe, and are.
When a large steam generator trips, the impact to the steam system is very dramatic, as the steam traveling from the boiler to the turbine has considerable mass, in the range of 3300 psi, at 1005*F, and a flow of about 5,000,000 lbs. per hour. All of which is traveling at several hundred mph. The piping from the boiler to the turbine is suspended about every 20 feet or so by large springs, (larger than on a big truck) to support the piping and absorb the shocks. Even so, 40 tons of piping may instantly move from one to two feet in the bat of an eye lash.