I like the color, the red is rich and fades into purple where more oxygen emissions mix with hydrogen. The Cave Nebula is a tricky beast . There are some bright portions for which you certainly have enough integration time but then the SNR drops quickly in the transition regions and the image can lack depth.
To address your questions specifically:
1) Stars are a bit on the fuzzy side. Not necessarily big but they lack definition and you have lost a lot of color in the star field. Also, many cores are blown out. If you think of the star intensity profile, I attempt as hard as I get not to get a flat top in the stars. If a star is bright and blows up, I want it to be bright everywhere until it disappears in the white. This is a downside of Masked Stretch. It leads to that star shape. I often stretch both with Histogram Transformation and Masked Stretch and then blend the two until I get a pleasing star profile.
2) As I said, I think you nailed the nebula color. There is a reflection component on the lower right side that couldmaybe stand out a little more but those are aesthetic choices. Star color can to be improved. There is a great tutorial by Barry Wilson that I have found very helpful for star color:
https://barrywilson.smugmug.com/PixInsight-Tutorials/Boosting-star-colour-Repaired-HSV-Separation3) The image is a bit on the noisy side. When you look at it at native resolution you see that in the shadows your SNR drops fast and the image loses depth. I think you need more data but a bit of well executed noise reduction can certainly help as well.
4) The nebula is well stretched and the image is not necessarily too contrasty. The downside of how you stretched the image is in the star shapes and color.
5) Framing is good. The composition is balanced with strong diagonal lines across the whole image. I need to put this target on my list for next year as it is a beautiful corner of the sky.
Incidentally, I am also in the Capital District - I am in Niskayuna and envious of your darker skies. I mountain bike and am very familiar with the trails in Pittstown State Forest.
Cheers,
Luca