- OREOS
- Hydrox look-a-likes
- Nutter Butters' kin
- Bicolor cookies
- Sandwich treats
- Lunchbox goodies
- Sandwich cookies
- Separable cookies
- The cookies in cookies-and-cream ice cream, often
- Centenarian cookies
- Cookies in some ice cream
- Black-and-white bites
- Cookies dipped in peanut butter in "The Parent Trap"
- Trichotomous treats
- Unlock the Magic cookies
- Nabisco bestseller
- Cookies
- Wonderfilled cookies
- Cookies crumbled in ice cream
- Crumbly sundae topping
- Often-dipped sandwiches
- Sundae topping
- Cookies that come in lemon and birthday cake flavors
- Treats that come in Thins and Double Stuf varieties
- Cookies that come a Golden variety
- Treats sold in sleeves
- Chocolate cookies
- Layered cookies
- Milk-dunked cookies
- Black-and-white snacks
- Lunchbox dessert, maybe
- Two-toned treats
- Subject of Weird Al Yankovic's "The White Stuff"
- Layered treats
- Black-and-white treats
- Bi-colored cookies
- Black-and-white junk food
- Twisted-apart treats
- Cookies sold in blue packages
- Best-selling cookies in China
- Bite-size sandwiches
- Snacks eaten from trays
- Bite-size sandwiches, maybe
- Treats sold in a Marshmallow Crispy variety
- Little dessert sandwiches
- Snacks sold in a "Green Tea" variety in Japan and China
- Some parfait toppings
- Newman's Own brand "Newman-O's" treats strongly resemble them
- Lickable cookies
- Embossed treats
- Items embossed with Pokémons that became collectors' items in 2021
- Black-and-white munchies
- Cream-filled cookies
- Lunchbox snacks
- Milk accompaniment
- Chocolate and creme cookies
- Dessert sandwiches
- Popular sandwich cookies
- Some people choose to lick them
- Twistable cookies
- Chips Ahoy alternative
- Stackable cookies
- After-lunch sandwiches
- Double Stuf, etc.
- Nabisco cookies
- Snack items since 1912
- Three-layered treats
- Cream-filled snacks
- Dunkable desserts
- Round, sweet sandwiches
- Stackable treats
- Black-and-white cookies
- Cookies 'n Cream cookies
- Creme-filled cookies
- Double Stuf products
- Snacks with milk
- They can take a licking?
- They're sometimes twisted apart
- Double Stuf Racing League cookies
- Snack sensations since 1912
- Crunchy ice cream mix-in
- Ice cream mix-ins
- Nabisco bestsellers
- Sweet sandwiches
- Triple-tiered treats
- Two-tone treats
- Classic sandwich cookies
- Cookies that are a century old
- Double Stuf treats
- Snack cookies
- Tiered treats
- Circular treats
- Belted Galloway cows, informally
- Classic milk-dunking cookies
- Cookies used in "dirt cake"
- Dirt cake ingredients
- Dunkable treats
- Three-tiered treats
- Cookies crumbled into a McFlurry
- Often-licked cookies
- Separable snacks
- Snacker's stack
- Tiered snacks
- Monochromatic cookies
- They go in some shakes
- They're black and white and a hundred years old and not crossword puzzles
- They're often found in balls
- Food in the Wonder Vault
- Nabisco treats
- Popular cookies
- Sandwiched sweets
- Triple-layer treats
- Cream-filled treats
- Circular sandwiches
- DoubleStuf cookies
- Layered snacks
- Double Delight snacks
- Lunchbox treats
- Mini or Chocolate Creme snacks
- Mint 'n Creme snacks
- Some are golden
- Three-layer snacks
- Two-tone snacks
- Layered dunkers
- They may be licked
- Oft-licked treats
- They're sometimes pulled apart
- Ingredients in a McFlurry, perhaps
- After-school treats
- Droxies used to compete with them
- 100-year-old treats
- Cookies mixed in some ice cream
- Hydrox rivals, once
- Some McFlurry ingredients
- Cookies in some pie crusts
- Creme-filled snacks
- Three-layer cookies
- Watch how wonder unfolds snacks
- Wonderfilled treats
- Easily crumbled cookies
- Lunchbox cookies
- They have Red Velvet and Watermelon varieties
- Three-layer treats
- Former Uh-Oh! cookies, now called Golden
- Cookie bits in some Milka chocolate bars
- Nabisco noshes
- Thins, e.g.
- Tiered cookies
- Cookies commonly in cookies and cream ice cream
- Cookies that once came in collectible tins
- McFlurry cookies
- Snack brand with a 2012 100th-anniversary "Daily Twist" campaign
- Dunked discs
- Sandwiches for dessert
- They have Mystery and Birthday Cake varieties
- They may be crumbled in ice cream
- Circular snacks
- Some Blizzard ingredients
- Thins, for instance
- Two-wafer snacks
- Black-and-white dunkers
- Snacks filled with "stuf"
- The first of them was sold March 6, 1912
- Treats with embossed surfaces
- Twist-top snacks
- Cookies that came in limited-edition Neapolitan and Snickerdoodle flavors in 2022
- Cookies that can illustrate phases of the moon
- Cookies with an occasional Mystery Flavor
- Snacks that turned 110 last year
- Classic cookies
- Cookies with a Sour Patch Kids flavor
- Snacks with limited-edition flavors
- Black and white nosh
- Triple-decker treats
- Classic chocolate sandwich cookies
- Treat with milk
- Droxies alternative
- Snacktime stack
- Treats with milk
- Mrs. Fields alternative
- Best-selling cookies
- Sweet debut of 1912
- Cookie favorites
- Chocolaty cookies
- Triple-decker cookies
- Billion-selling cookies
- Black and white dunkees
- Certain ice-cream additives
- Extras in some ice creams
- Ice-cream extra, perhaps
- Two-color treats
- Two-tone cookies
- Celebrate the Kid Inside snacks
- After-school treat
- Cookies in some ice creams
- They're essential to a Dairy Queen "Blizzard"
- Triple-decker snacks
- Crunchy ice-cream ingredient
- Lunchbox dessert
- Part of some piecrusts
- After-school snacks
- Three-part cookies
- Double Stuf snacks
- They're essential to Midnight Mash Up snacks
- Deep-fried fare at fairs
- Tiered sweets
- Crunchy sundae topping
- 53-calorie snacks
- Crunchy ice-cream add-in
- Triple-tier sweets
- What Newman-Os mimic
- Three-tier cookies
- Crunchy part of some cakes
- School lunch staple
- What the 10 longest answers have all been limited editions of
- Wonderfilled food
- 110th Birthday limited edition for 2022
- 110th Birthday snacks for 2022
- Two-toned sandwich cookies
- Small sandwiches
- Snacks in stacks
- Sweets sold in sleeves
- Droxies' lookalikes
- Ice cream shop mix-in
- Snacks that can be dunked or twisted
- Nonagenarian cookies
- They're sometimes deep-fried at carnivals
- Sandwiches that are often eaten open-faced?
- Chocolate snacks
- Creme-filled munchies
- Hydrox alternatives
- Creme cookies
- They can be licked
- They may get a licking after dinner
- Cookies 1 3/4" in diameter
- Some take a licking
- Snacks packaged in trays
- Lunchbox desserts
- Chocolaty treats
- Stackable snackables
- Snacks often served with milk
- Treats often taken apart
- Snacks dipped in milk
- They're often twisted apart
- Filled treats
- Round snack items
- Snacks often eaten inside out
- Cookies in a box lunch
- Onetime meringue-filled treats
- They come in a Triple Double variety
- Topic of Weird Al Yankovic's "The White Stuff"
- Many people like to take these apart
- Cookies that flavor some ice cream
- Cookies that can be twisted apart
- Common ice cream mix-in
- Cookies in "Wonderfilled" ads
- Cookies with a "Golden" variety
- Some crumbled dessert toppings
- Cookies with a Double Stuf variety
- Sandwich cookies now sold by Mondelez
- They can be crushed for a pie crust
- Things to "Twist, Lick, Dunk" in a game app
- Little sandwiches for dessert
- Snacks often paired with milk
- Crushed toppings for ice cream sundaes
- Shelfmates of Chips Ahoy!
- Black-and-white stack
- Product whose package has a splash of milk
- Snack items with their name on the top and bottom
- Some froyo bar toppings
- Dunkable cookies
- Rival of Hydrox cookies
- Snacks that sometimes come in sleeves
- Cruciverbalist's favorite cookies?
- Their name has the "re" of "cream" and the two o's from "chocolate"
- Ingredients in some black-and-white cheesecakes
- Subjects of a "Twist on it" ad campaign
- Treats that Paul Hollywood and Prue Leith picked as runner-up to Doritos for "best snack in America"
- Twistable treats
- Dipped cookies
- 96-year-old cookies
- Cookies introduced to the Chinese market in 1996
- Short-lived Domino's "dessert pizza" topping
- Dunked cookies
- Often-dipped cookies
- Twistable little treats
- Splittable cookies
- Green room treats, perhaps
- So forget ___, eat Cool J cookies
- King Candy's guards in "Wreck-It Ralph," e.g.
- Black-and-white joy
- Food items often disassembled before consumption
- Cookies with a limited-edition cherry-cola flavor
- For a limited time, they came in Swedish Fish flavor
- They might be deep-fried at a fair
- Cookies that share a color scheme with orcas
- Twist, Lick, Dunk cookies
- Ingredients in a dirt cake
- Shelfmates of Lorna Doones
- @Upcoming___ (parody Twitter account that announces fictional cookie flavors)
- Cookies sometimes disassembled before eating
- Cookies with a Double Stuf version
- Cookies-and-cream cookie
- Dark cookies
- Nabisco favorites
- Some black and white snacks
- Two-toned cookies
- Cookies similar to Creme Betweens
- Cookies with a gluten-free variety as of 2021
- Crushed cookies in froyo places
- Mondelez cookies
- Crunchy snacks
- Cookies with a white filling
- Lunch box cookie treats
- Some cookie favorites
- Three-part treats
- Hydrox rivals
- Cookies with white fillings
- Sugary cookie snacks
- After-lunch sandwiches, perhaps
- Cookies crushed for pie crusts
- Triple-layer cookies
- Cookies in many a box lunch
- Cookies often used as crossword clues
- Nabisco goodies
- Some cookies
- Cookies for over 100 years
- Cookies nearly 2 inches in diameter
- Cookies in a box lunch, perhaps
- Some sandwich cookies
- Cookies with three parts
- Some common cookies
- Common cookies
- Multi-voweled cookies
- Cookies with creme
- Snacks that can be dunked
- Cookies-and-cream cookies
- Hydrox cookies inspired them
- Some are fudge covered
- Cookies sometimes deconstructed
- Cookies with a Lady Gaga variety
- Cookies in a dirt cake
- Cookies with an amazing variety of flavors
- Cookies crushed into an ice cream topping
- Cookies with a Super Mario variety
- Treats that can be twisted
- Sour Patch Kid ___ Are the Latest in a Long Line of Wacky Flavors (Daily Beast headline)
- Cookies in a certain McFlurry
- Cookies in some Blizzards
- Cookies that may be mixed into ice cream
- Cookies with a Space Dunk variety
- Cream cookies
- They go with milk
- Sandwich indulgences
- Snacks with three layers
- Cookies in some Dairy Queen Blizzards
- Cookies often served with milk
- Cookie choices
- Cookies in a box lunch, sometimes
- Crunchy treats with milk
- Twisted-apart cookies
- Twistable snacks
- Cookies deep-fried at fairs
- Cookies in dirt cake
- Cookies in McFlurrys
- Black-and-white sleeveful
- Dunkables since 1912
- A British competitive eater took down 141 of them in five minutes in 2020
- Black-white-black snacks
- Cookies in sleeves
- Cream-filled chocolate snacks
- A scientific study in 2022 classified their creme texture as "mushy"
- Cookies irresistible to rats
- Cookies often taken apart
- Cookies used to model moon phases
- The Most Stuf cookies
- Crushed cookies in a "dirt and worms" dessert
- Cookies crumbled on many desserts
- Cookies with a limited edition Space Dunk variety
- Sandwich snacks
- Double Stufs, e.g.
- Stackable snacks
- Ornately embossed edibles
- Twisted cookies
- Ingredients in TGI Friday's dessert Cup of Dirt
- Cookies 'n Creamtini cocktail cookies
- Treats with a 2024 limited-edition Dirt Cake variety
- Popular snacks that inspired this puzzle's theme
- Lunchbox favorites
- Dunkable snacks
- Crunchy pie crust components
- Sandwiches in lunchboxes
- Sweet snacks for over a century
- Culinary creation of 1912
- Ingredients in some sundaes
- They come three rows to a package
- Bicolor snack
- Makeup of some pie crusts
- Tripartite treats
- Crumbles on sundaes
- Treats once advertised as "The Original Twister"
- Three-part snacks
- Bicolor treats
- Crushed ice cream topping
- Snacks often twisted apart
- Snacks often untwisted
- Cookies in ice cream flavors
- Some are used for pie crusts
- Sweet treats since 1912