The Kjeldahl method now encompasses milk from other species as well as internationally traded dairy products covered by Codex standards. The revised standard ISO 8968-1:2014 (IDF 20-1:2014) reconfirms the crucial role of the Kjeldahl method in trade harmonisation, and enhances consumer protection safeguards.
The Kjeldahl method plays a pivotal role in national and international trade, for example in calculating fair milk payments for dairy farmers, controlling manufacturing processes and in checking regulatory compliance.
“This standard is about the determination of one of the major components in milk and many milk products; in fact, the component that accounts for over 50% of the market value of milk,” said Dr Harrie van den Bijgaart, chair of the ISO technical committee on milk and milk products.
This, combined with the fact that international collaborative studies of the method had only been conducted for liquid bovine whole milk thus far, illustrated the need to validate the method for products other than bovine whole milk.
“IDF and ISO experts have now successfully modified and scientifically validated the method so that it applies to a wide range of dairy products,” said Dr Jaap Evers, chair of the IDF Methods Standards Steering Group. “In addition to liquid bovine whole milk, the method can now be applied to bovine milk with reduced fat content, goat whole milk, sheep whole milk, cheese, dried milk and dried milk products including milk-based infant formulae, milk protein concentrate, whey protein concentrate, casein and caseinate.”
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