Bring the oven up to heat first. You may have to play with it a bit to get the temp right. Once you have your desired temp, put the blade in edge up when possible. I always used the middle rack, some may have other ideas. Your oven will be hotter up higher, but if you leave the thermometer close to your blade, that will give you the temp, which ever rack it's on. After each hour remove the blade and leave the oven on. The blade should cool in about 15 minutes. After the last heat you can turn the oven off and leave the blade in, or take it out. No matter at this point. Any heat source that will bring the blade somewhere above non magnetic, or close to a quench heat will begin the normalizing, which is just a quick anneal. Three times like the temper, letting it cool between heats. After the second heat, it is a good time to correct any warpage. I found that if you continue normalizing until you stop getting warpage, you will have less, often none after you do the hardening quench. Heat the blade if possible, in a point down position hanging from a wire, or clamped in position, or just hold it with tongs. You can reheat as soon as all color has left the blade. I have a very large propane torch that I used to use. You can also forego the normalizing, and just thouroghly anneal the blade by heating it to a red orange, hold the heat for a maybe a minute, do not let it over heat though, if you ever have a piece of steel go yellow, throw it out and start over, the grain has grown beyond the point of recovery, then plunge it into a bucket full of vermiculite and cover it well. The next day it will be pretty much annealled. To get a maximum anneal, you would have to hold that heat for around ten minutes, and have decarb protection, making it all a bit difficult. I have a heat treat oven making the process much easier.
Here's a little tip to correct warpage. After the hardening quench, and the blade is still uncomfortable to handle without gloves or a rag, you have about 5 minutes in which you can straighten it with your hands. Things are still moving inside the steel for a short time. If you have warpage after the temper process, you can put the blade in a vise, it needs to be polished where you can see the colors, with a small propane torch, apply heat to the spine where the warp is until the area turns straw color, over correct a little bit, and pour water on it to cool while you continue to hold it. DO NOT let the heat go to the edge though. You may have to repeat this, but it does work. I learned this years ago from a Bill Moran tape. Good luck, take care