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Meat proteins have an high nutritional value and also a technological importance: they affect the quality of the finished product, influencing some properties as well as water retention, emulsifying capability and the softness of the dough.
Kjeldahl is nowadays the most used method for determining nitrogen and protein contents in foods and feeds thanks to the high level of precision and reproducibility and to its simple application. The modern Kjeldahl method consists in a procedure of catalytically supported mineralization of organic material in a boiling mixture of sulfuric acid and sulfate salt at digestion temperatures higher than 400 °C. During the process the organically bonded nitrogen is converted into ammonium sulfate. Alkalizing the digested solution liberates ammonia which is quantitatively steam distilled and determined by titration.