Smart Food for the future

Committed to a healthy lifestyle

With our years of experience, we at Smart Food for the Future pursue the vision of combining conscious nutrition and an active lifestyle within a company built and continuously developed together with like-minded people. We see entrepreneurship as our calling, firmly rooted in ambitious goals and strong intrinsic motivation—much like in competitive sports. Driven by the relentless desire to leave more behind than we found, we are committed to the sustainable development of SFFF and functional food.

Functional Food

Functional foods are foods that can provide additional health benefits beyond basic nutrition. These foods are often fortified with nutrients such as vitamins, minerals, probiotics, proteins or fiber, or modified to contain ingredients that promote wellness and potentially improve health. Typical examples of this are fortified cereals, probiotic yogurt or foods in which less healthy ingredients are replaced by beneficial alternatives. The concept of functional foods emerged in Japan in the 1980s when regulators began to approve foods with proven health benefits to improve public health.

Key features of functional food

Food with added benefits

These products are often recommended as part of a balanced diet to provide specific health benefits that go beyond basic nutritional needs.

Preventive benefits

Functional foods are not only intended to cover daily nutritional requirements, but also to help reduce the risk of certain diseases or promote general well-being. For example, functional foods can strengthen the immune system or improve digestion.

Targeted enrichment

Functional foods are enriched with specific ingredients that offer scientifically proven health benefits. Examples include yogurt with probiotics to support gut health or omega-3 fatty acids in bread to promote heart health.

Our Trading Partners

Board

Entrepreneurship and active assumption of responsibility are also reflected in the fact that all our board members are personally invested, following the “skin in the game” principle.