?? You're going down. Make the best of it.
My point was referring to: "And if I'm hanging out at FL300 with an airport right below me, I'd probably shove the nose over with the prop feathered and REALLY let that turbine start windmilling while spiraling over the field."
Make the best of it? That's my point. He neglected to mention the liquor in the catering drawer.
Seriously though, an engine failure at cruise in the PC-12 is not a shove the nose over, build the airspeed excessively, spiraling, so I can get on the ground maneuver.
You've got plenty of time to work the problem, as I said up to about 30 minutes (and SoonerAv8r mentioned 48,312 square miles). Regardless of IMC/VMC, set your self up for a precision approach. Utilizing the autopilot to reduce your workload, hold airspeed, and basically set up a hold at the final approach fix, not over the field.
Now you have time, possibly, to try for an airstart. Perhaps you had time to attempt a restart as you navigated to your intended landing site, but if not, now's a great time to try it.
At approx. 1000-2000' above the final appraoch fix altitude on the inbound course, now lower pitch to gain airspeed, to intercept the glideslope, and shoot the approach and land.
That's how I'd make the best of it.