If the blix removes the silver and subsequent silver salts from the paper, the paper will be creamy white. The blix is therefore useful regardless of the time and temperature required for silver removal as it goes to completion.
If you wish a more precise test, then use the sulfide test on the washed strip of B&W paper. It should show no residual silver halide, and the retained hypo test should show no test for hypo in the paper after the wash.
If the blix is cloudy and / or smells of sulfur, it is bad. Don't bother to test it, throw it out.
You can try the exhausted fixer test on the blix as well by adding KI solution to the blix and seeing if there is a yellow precipitate. If not, then the fixer portion is still probably working, but if the fixer portion fails, the blix activity goes way way down.
Actually however, everything works in concert in the paper blix. So if one thing fails, all of them fail and the B&W paper in the test I suggest stays brown or black or grey, depending. It is a remarkably easy and accurate measure of blix activity and rate. Just ratio out the proportionate rate of blixing between B&W paper and color paper to make sure that things are being done right with the color paper, as each B&W paper and color paper have different silver levels. You gain experience with practice.
Recalibrate your eyeball every time you change paper types, either the B&W test paper or the color paper brand.
PE