I'm sure adding honey to milk and letting it sit out makes a wonderful fermented drink, but I don't believe it's kefir. Kefir is a drink made from a symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast from the Caucasus region known as kefir grains. Without these grains, you you don't have real kefir. ( See the almighty wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kefir )
There's a pretty fascinating story about how these prized and secret grains were acquired by Russians. You can read it here: http://www.bedrokcommunity.org/id159.html
Most kefir grains I have found were only about twenty dollars and if you take good care of them -- which is really just making perpetual batches of kefir in healthy milk to drink -- they last forever. They are rather resilient cultures.
Thanks for the link from W
ackipedia the online source for all the people in the world that have an opinion.
Here is what it says-
"Kefir (pronounced /k??f??r/ k?-FEER)[1] (alternately kef?rs, keefir, kephir, kewra, talai, mudu kekiya, milkkefir, búlgaros), purportedly[citation needed] from either the Turkish "keyif" (joy/pleasure) or "köpür" ((milk) froth, foam),
is a fermented milk drink that originated with shepherds of the North Caucasus region, who discovered that fresh milk carried in leather pouches would occasionally ferment into an effervescent beverage."
They (the originators) had no grains and neither do you have to unless you are attempting to make some mythical drink which is at best a pain to keep the grains as most people do not drink the stuff every day and thus run into the situation like we did where what do you do with the grains while you are not using them. It's not as if they are nice neat little marbles. They are a sloppy gelatinous mess if you do not use them constantly.
You have to store them and it all gets to be a pain not to mention now you have some uber fermented rotten milk in a jar in the fridge unless you "wash" them.
Then the issue is where are they as they get mired in the sludge in the jar.
My GF was thrilled when someone asked if we had some grains to give away. We had long since stopped using them.
The honey causes it to ferment very nicely in room temperature and prevents it from going rotten for a longer period of time. It's utterly practical.
The whole idea is to predigest the milk especially for anyone who has difficulty digesting milk.
What difference which strain of bacteria it is?
You can buy a lot of honey for twenty dollars and it keeps indefinitely with no mess and it takes away some of the extreme sour flavour and adds digestive power to the kefir which can be difficult for a lot of people to digest due to it's density and the fact that it clumps up.