I like what I get from
@Buster1's article.
Yes, best glide and head to a landing spot first. And yes, have those "bold face" items down and a good cockpit flow. And definitely, if you have time, run the actual checklist for what you may have missed.
But my takeaway from
@Buster1 is, if you take the time (now, not during the emergency) to think about the procedure, all the trouble shooting/possible restart steps involve what he refers to as the combustion triangle. Some people are good at rote memorization. For others, understanding a procedure is itself a memorization aid. (Soapbox: better than a bunch of incomprehensible mnemonics)
I recall a conversation with an instructor who noticed students had difficulty memorizing the bold items in the engine fire in flight checklist, until they finally came to the realization they all came down to shut the fuel, shut the air, and get your a$$ down. The checklist/flow suddenly became obvious, not just a bunch of steps.