@jayh - Bustelo is a tin-can or bag variety; kind of a coffee OTC blend. Dark and sturdy, great in a moka pot.
@ Baskerville--I've had the civet coffee, and it's quite good actually--and definitely unique!
@ jankomatic--"I like that they roast their coffee, not burn it like most makers do. " This is a catch-22 for the production side of the industry. Starbucks created the "3rd wave" flavor profile standard out of great beans--that were unfortunately burned out of the sheer necessity of volume. To maintain the consistency of blends in the scale that they work on (17,000+ locations and counting) they need to roast darker, which evens out the caramelization process amongst varietals as well as slightly prolonging the shelf life of the roasted beans (ideally within 2 weeks from roast date before the gassing-off metabolizes the bulk of the aromatic oils). The "OTC" brands--those you buy from a can in the supermarket, also major volume producers--roast too dark as well, and actually gas-out the coffee before it's packaged; it was a process developed post-WW2 to re-invigorate the flagging industry, unfortunately at the severe cost of taste. Not to be a snob about it, because I still enjoy "regular" coffees like this myself, but the manufacture and brewing methods have trained generations of us to regard a very stale, lifeless version of coffee as the "standard"; which I give Starbucks credit for at least revamping. There's never been a better time for coffee, in fact--even instant coffee; I was recently at the SCAA trade show in Houston and sampled some high-end 'soluble' from Maximus Group that made my Nescafe seem like an old tire by comparison.
Regarding blue mountain coffee, I can say that it is one of the most individual and exquisite of flavors; I had the good fortune to live and work in the blue mountains on the Charlottenburg estate one Spring, rehabilitating an old plantation high above Kingston. Waking up before sunrise to roast green peaberries over a camp stove, crush them with a mortar and pestle, and brew them into black ambrosia, watching the first rays of light lift the clouds from the valley below us...that was some natural mystic right there.
Getting into the specialty coffee industry again several years later and I'm amazed at the vast amount of science, experience and money that has gone into this single commodity recently. There are hundreds of boutique roasters available now, green beans for you to roast your own (remarkably easy, btw) are plentiful, and a real consumer shift of raised awareness and expectation of flavor profiles has been nothing short of a renaissance for the beverage.
If anyone is interested in a fantastic read on the subject, check out God in a Cup: The Obsessive Quest for the Perfect Coffee by Michaele Weissman, J Wiley publishing.