I don't think you're going to get a definitive, step-by-step checklist on how to handle closed but highly-voted questions, if only because the community has been divided on this since the start of the site. Also, each case can be very different.
A large debate was had years ago about whether or not to delete highly-voted but currently off-topic questions. Moderators were put in the middle of this, getting yelled at for either deleting or not deleting these questions. As a result, more of this was handed off to the community. I think it's healthy to have open debates on whether or not a specific question belongs on the site.
My personal opinion is that questions which have been demonstrated to be useful (via votes, great answers, etc.) but are no longer a good fit for the site should be closed but not deleted. The purpose of Stack Overflow is to make the Internet a better place, and I do not believe that deleting highly-voted or otherwise useful content is in service of that goal. Sometimes, I feel that people get too caught up in a strict interpretation of the site's rules and lose sight of the forest for the trees.
But that's just my opinion. I tend to not overrule the desires of the community, and I rely on the process described in the previously-mentioned post. If sufficient people feel that a closed, highly-voted question should be deleted, their votes carry weight. Likewise, people can argue for undeletion of these posts if they feel strongly enough about it. Again, debates around these questions where both sides make their case can be healthy.
Where we step in to apply locks are the cases where people can't stop arguing and a post goes through multiple delete / undelete cycles. In those cases, we tend to either delete something for good or apply a historical lock. Historical locks are rare, and tend to only be used for contentious posts like this. I've only applied a handful of them in my time here.
When I was a normal user, here's how I'd approach a closed and upvoted question to determine if it needed to be deleted. First, if there were no answers and the question itself couldn't be rewritten to be on topic, there shouldn't be a problem with casting a delete vote. If there were answers, are they completely outdated or wrong and unlikely to be updated? That could also justify a delete vote. If there was any lasting value at all in the answers, I would not vote to delete.
However, I know that other moderators and members of the community don't share my opinions about this. This is why we have Meta to hash these things out.