Try the Evernew Ti Alcohol stove - light is right.
I have been an avid MSR PocketRocket user for years, and for cold/late season hunts, canister stoves are less finicky and easier to get to a boil faster than alcohol stoves.
But, for early season hunts (September) especially here in MT, the weather is typically nice, even hot during the day, so the super light alcohol stoves are a great option.
I recently picked up the Evernew stove, along with the DX stand. See it here:
http://www.evernewamerica.com/EBY255.htm
It is all titanium, and allows you to burn 1 or 2 oz of AL, and the DX stand incorporates a nice windscreen and pot stand, all in one. Total weight for the stove and stand is right at 3 oz. Very well made, and it all fits in my cook pot.
Boil times for 16 oz of water clocks in at around 6 to 7 minutes, using 1.5 oz of fuel. A day's worth of boiling (breakfast and dinner) requires about 3 oz of fuel, so for a 5 day hunt, 15 oz of alcohol, plus the pot and stove/stand is all you need. total weight: 1.8 lbs. Every day your kit gets lighter, as you burn fuel. Storing fuel is easy: a plastic soda bottle is all you need! (one important note: rubbing alcohol is not the right fuel for these stoves -- you must use methyl alcohol, or even Heet to get a good, hot burn.)
I enjoy looking for ways to lighten the load, as it allows me to go farther and if I knock something down, my first carry out load can be the full 'camp' plus a quarter or boned out meat bag. My goal this fall is to incorporate more ultralight backpacking systems and gear (superlight tarp/tent combo, multi-use gear, alcohol stove, etc.) and get the base weight down for a 5 day hunt, minus water at 30 pounds. That is everything: shelter, sleeping system, cook system, food, essential gear.
Anyone else use some of the other AL stoves? Brasslite and the Caldera Cone are some other great options--here is one other great thing about these stoves, especially the Evernew with the DX stand: they are truly multi-fuel, meaning, you can burn esbit tabs in a pinch, or even use it as a small woodstove; this thing is sweet!