I think that first instinct would simply be to play A
♣, K
♣ and 6
♣ unblocking the suit and cashing 5 club tricks off the top! Except, if that were the solution this likely wouldn't be posted here. And, this reality is somewhat polluting my thinking. It wouldn't be strange for south to misrepresent having a doubleton in clubs if they had some other weakness.
1) North seems to have 5 cashing spade tricks.
**
2) If south holds the A
♥, they've got 3-4 cashing heart tricks too.
3) If south holds the Q
♣ and A
♥, declarer has 9 tricks on A
♣, K
♣, 6
♣.
**: Unless partner has JT53
♠. This makes 1NT a strange rebid. I'm dismissing this possiblity.
So, let's look at a few possible layouts.
I think, what it likely comes down to is that partner has a well positioned diamond holding. I think examples like the one with KQJ
♦ may well start with a different lead. Probably the best line of play is to play the K
♣ at trick one, and put a small diamond on the table. The 10
♦ is equally as good, but, I think it's possible declarer may misplay diamonds if we let them. Rather than banking on partner holding exactly AQ9(X)
♦, I'd like to give declarer the chance to play the J
♦ instead of the 9
♦ over my 3
♦ switch. Partner should return a club for a second finesse.
EDIT: I think it's possible for declarer to have something like AQJ
♦ and a diamond switch simply does the work for declarer, where breaking clubs might be better, as declarer can't gain their second diamond trick before losing 3 clubs, 1 diamond and say the A
♥. But, this is a tough one. You can easily get it wrong.