Yes, absolutely practical.
The simplest approach is a so-called "adding" interferometer, which
just requires that you combine the two antenna signals
together in a simple RF combiner before your receiver.
Sticking with an all-analog approach, the AD8302 phase/gain detector
can be used to build a "mutiplying" interferometer,
which produces superior results to the adding interferometer.
You'd measure the output of this with a laboratory-type
A/D, since it's basically producing a detected output with a
low-pass filter.
Going with an SDR-based approach, any receiver that has two or more
channels that are mutually-coherent can be used,
where you take the two synchronized data streams and correlate
them with a conjugate multiply. Off the top of my head:
o USRP B210
o BladeRF (although I understand the two-channel drivers don't
work very well)
o The original LimeSDR-USB (that radio has been discontinued)
o The ADALM Pluto Rev C or newer--there are instructional videos
on converting to two-channel operation
o The KrakenSDR -- this provides 5 mutually-coherent channels,
albeit with only about 2MHz usable bandwidth