discover true colors from nature
We are Maarten and Dieuwertje, brother and sister from The Hague. With Big Moca, we want to show that food and drinks can be more colorful without artificial shortcuts. Ube is our purple starting point: a real ingredient with a striking color and a soft taste.
Brother and sister,
with an eye for color
Big Moca grew out of our curiosity for new flavors, real ingredients, and natural color. Inside our family business, Yogho Yogho Group, we also work on brands like Yogho Yogho and Powerful People Nutrition.
While testing recipes in The Hague, we kept coming back to ube. The purple color comes from nature, but the taste completes it: creamy, gently nutty, and softly sweet. That is exactly the combination we look for.
Shop the collectionBIG MOCA TIMELINE
Why ube?
Ube fits our core idea: true colors from nature. It brings a deep purple color to lattes, desserts, and bakes, without being only about looks. The taste is soft, rounded, and recognizable.
We want to bring more natural color into the world of food and drinks. Not as a gimmick, but as a better way to make products people see, taste, and remember.
A family business with flavor brands
Big Moca is part of our family business, Yogho Yogho Group. Within the same group, we build distinctive brands with their own flavor worlds: from natural color in ube and matcha to protein snacks and the recognizable Yogho Yogho experience.
Big Moca
Ube, matcha, and specialty drinks with true colors from nature.
Yogho Yogho
An iconic dairy drink brand with a recognizable taste and a loyal fanbase.
Powerful People
Protein snacks with familiar flavors, built for people who want convenience and taste.
What we make
- 01. Powders for baristas Built for speed and a more consistent latte.
- 02. Concentrates For busy moments and easier dosing.
- 03. Ready-to-drink For vending, hospitality, and on-the-go.
From us
We still do a lot ourselves: tasting, adjusting, speaking with customers, and improving. Big Moca started personally and grows from a clear belief: color can be real, come from ingredients, and still work practically.
— Maarten & Dieuwertje