I like all styles of bows but will always style myself a longbow and hybrid-man. I like the lovely curves of a nicely styled recurve and the different draw feel is neat, as well as the raw speed and power of some of the more aggressive ones.
For me to keep a recurve for any length of time requires it to be pretty special, aka a good all-rounder, with the right balance of ease of shooting/smoothness, speed and above all quiet relative sound level.
So far only a few recurves have fulfilled this for me. I won't rank them them but I will say the Chinook, Rose Oak Heritage, and Bob Lee are my overall favorites for being well rounded. Some are faster, some are arguably prettier.
Toelke Chinook
(by far the quietest recurve I have ever shot, just a joy to shoot with classic 50's styling, and with a more longbow style grip it bridges the gap for those on the fence IMHO. I hope to own a 2pc someday)
Rose Oak Heritage
(New model from Brandon. Wow. Just wow.)
Bob Lee
(just a sweet all-rounder that is one of the best balanced (shooting qualities) recurve bows available IMHO and the legacy is obvious)
Whippenstick Phoenix
(brutal performance, very quiet, craftsmanship to rival all others)
Schafer Silvertip double-carbon
(just a superlative hunting weapon)
Robertson Fatal Styk
(possibly the best standard pistol grip on a recurve I've ever felt, prolly tied with the Bob Lee)
RER XR
(right up there too, really really sweet and very quiet)
Saluki Ibex
(pound for pound the blazingest leanest lightest nasty shooting machine I've sampled, unconventional and not for the casual shooter, a real Ferrari)
Java Man Helms Deep
(Short and made to hunt!)
Cari-bow Tuktu EX
(Classic and radical all at once, a real shooter)
Habu Vyperkahn
(the real Rolls Royce of the group and truly a special shooting experience, IMHO much like the Saluki, a bow you need to try before you die!)