Eat the Olympic Rings

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Jessie Oleson of Cakespy presented these cool cookies on Serious Eats. It's basically a recipe for sugar cookies, turned into Olympic rings by adding food coloring to different batches of dough. The brown ring is simply a mix of all the food coloring shades. She used a doughnut cutter to make the round cookies into rings.

Gold Medal Rings

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This recipe takes a little work, but the result—an Olympic gold medal—is well worth it. Virginie from That Cute Little Cake tops her favorite cookies with colored sugar paste.

RELATED: Team USA's Youngest Olympians

Lollipop Rings

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These cute marshmallow pops from Party Pinching are super easy to make. Just dip your marshmallows into CandiQuik, stick in a red, white and blue candy cane and top off with a Lifesaver.

RELATED: Easy Finger Food

Pepperoni Rings

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Pepperoni is the perfect pizza pairing—especially when you want your pie to be topped with the Olympic rings! There's nothing new to this recipe (found on My Sisters' Cucina)—just make your pizza as normal, then arrange pepperoni (or whatever topping you'd like) into the distinctive five rings.

Roll-up Rings

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Make a small, quick set of Olympic rings by dipping an Oreo into CandiQuick, then topping with fruit roll ups cut out into circles to create the logo. Thanks to Party Pinching for the idea.

Pretzel Rings

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The real star of these caramel pretzel cheesecake brownies are the Olympic rings on top. Inside BruCrew Life simply used food-colored CandiQuick to coat pretzel rings, then stuck them straight up with whipped cream. You can use the same concept to top whatever dessert you'd like.

Pizza Rings

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Imnopeas of Instructables created this cool Olympic pizza. She uses purple potatoes, black olives, tomatoes, broccoli and yellow squash to create rainbow rings. Cutting all the toppings small and in circles makes it easy to shape them into rings.

RELATED: 10 Mom Olympians

M&M Rings

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Sweet and simple! Flickr user cjlevinson made these cool Olympic "rings" (well, squares) with nothing more than a bag of M&M's. Luckily, M&M's come in all the necessary colors.

Doughnut Rings

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Doughnuts make the perfect rings for an Olympic logo. Whether you take bites out of them (yum!) like in this example or simply place them next to each other, it's easy to find the pastries in the right colors.

Bread Bowl Rings

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Want an easy Olympic-themed appetizer? Try You Are My Fave's bread bowls filled with colorful dips—tzatziki, black olives, tomatoes, salsa verde and red pepper hummus.

Bagel Rings

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Yes, there are some healthy options for Olympic rings food! Try Baby Budgeting's fruity bagels—just slice 'em in half, smear with cream cheese and then top with a color-appropriate fruit: blueberries, blackberries, strawberries, grapes and pineapples all work well.

Nanaimo Rings

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Get the recipe for yummy Nanaimo bars at the Kitchn. It's basically a super-yummy crust, topped with custardy vanilla buttercream and then chocolate … and of course, finished off with frosted Olympic rings. The cookie cutter used to make the distinct shape is no longer available, but you can do it yourself with some careful cutting.