First, I think I would use the noun dislike.
And then it seems to be a matter of whether you speak British English or talk American English. Compare this NGram for American English:
and this for British English:
Interestingly, if you remove the "a strong" from the search terms, you get [as Barrie England points out in his answer and zpletan in his comment], a more pronounced preference for dislike of, especially in British English. If you search for "a dislike of/for", adding the article a, a dislike of is still preferred but only by a slim margin in American English. (I didn't add those graphs, but you can create the NGram using the links provided.)
Compare this NGram of dislike of/for in American English
And this NGram of dislike of/for in British English:
The bottom line is that dislike of is preferred, but both dislike of and dislike for are used, understandable, and mean the same thing. (That is, you are no longer fond of Dubstep.)
'Appealing to' and 'Appealing for' are different.
One appeals to someone (a person, an institution, a court, a foundation etc) to do something.
The other appeals for something ( a benefit, a ruling, funds, help, etc).
I am appealing to you to accept my answer.
I am appealing for points as I do not have many.
'... choose a time that is appealing to you'
'... choose a time that is appealing for you'
I would prefer the first example, but the second example is comprehensible. I would prefer:
'.....choose a time that appeals to you' or '.... choose a time that is convenient for you'.
Best Answer
"Associated to" would occasionally be acceptable when speaking about certain IT concepts, but in general purpose usage, "Associated with" is preferable nearly every time.