The Xtreme is a great stove, period. It has a
lot of output, but you can burn through the fuel if you don't keep the flame down a bit.
For me, when I'm thinking cold temperatures, melting snow, etc, I much prefer the Xtreme over an alcohol stove, but I do know people that are alcohol "die hards" and use alcohol in all four seasons. To me, alcohol is a great choice above 10C/50F. Below that, I'm a gas or liquid fuel (petroleum based) kind of guy.
With regard to alcohol, if a stove needs priming in weather above 10C/50F, it's not the stove for me. Priming is
by it's very nature inefficient. That fuel you're using for priming counts against your efficiency numbers. In colder temperatures, priming is a necessary evil.
This past weekend, I went out with (among other things) an alcohol stove made from 222ml mini Coke cans. The top opening was smaller than the inner wall of the stove and had a 1:1 ratio to the height of the burner. I was able to get efficiency numbers very close to the efficiency numbers of the commercially produced 12-10 alcohol burner. I ran my tests in a Clikstand set up. The windscreen/pot stand set up that you use makes a great deal of difference as does ground temperature.
My testing set up:
HJ