Very, very nice!
Freeze some and whip out for magic hostessing when friends drop by. Especially the quiche bars.
I wolfed down mini quiche for lunch today while standing at the kitchen island.
I don’t know much about Jarlsberg (never having bought it), but given the quantity mix of cheeses at hand, I’d suggest grating in the FP before freezing so it’s easily usable later.
Or turning it into cheese sauce that can be used for all kinds of things (mac & cheese being the most obvious, but cheesy bechamel / mornay goes well with plenty of other things like potato and cauliflower).
Another good use for frozen cheese is Apero bread or other savory cheese quick breads or gougeres (see this BCOTQ for a number of iterations, though Dorie’s version was my introduction to this dish) – but it takes less space to store grated cheese than to freeze baked goods incorporating it
You can use Jarlsberg pretty much anywhere you would use a Swiss type cheese - Mac and cheese, fondue, quiche, grilled cheese. It does freeze well. As @Saregama suggested, you may want to grate it for easier use when thawed.
TWO POUNDS OF CHEESE
ETA: OTOH, that only leaves 4 lbs for @Sasha to contend with…
Thank you for the suggestions all but as a rule, no one here but me eats hot or melted cheese, except on pizza and the occasional grilled cheese (2 of us). Mac and cheese is not a thing here. Nor are cheese topped casseroles, gratins, and so on. They are most open to eating cheese in its cold state, with bread and cheese and pickly things. But not the particular types of cheese that I have a lot left of. Hence my predicament is not from I don’t know how to use it up, but rather, no one here likes it but me. It’s ok. No pity party needed
I’d give it to a friend who makes those things we’ve suggested, if you have way too much, if you have a friend who will take it. Or do a trade with a local Hungry Onion Cheesehound.
Eh. Get a new fam
This is a very good suggestion.
Ya know, that’s so much easier
Of course. Just the wrong cheeses, as I mentioned. Note to self. Never buy 10 lbs of things, even for a party. And don’t buy things that no one in your family will eat but you, if they are left over.
I have 2 friends who are usually grateful recipients when I buy the wrong things or too many things.
One gets whole coffee beans and pretty much everything I don’t like.
The other gets extra produce from the farmers’ market that is too much for our house and surplus wheat carbs, since they don’t buy wheat carbs because his wife is gluten-free and Celiac.
Toronto now has some community fridges where one can leave unopened cheese, dairy, meat and eggs.