You can't force the user to go through the authorization dialog again, because as far as Facebook is concerned, the user has installed your application and nothing else needs to happen. The best thing you can do here is write your own form which informs the user that the Facebook proxy e-mail address is unacceptable and you need a real e-mail address. Unfortunately, this does not force the user to give you their Facebook account e-mail address, or even a real e-mail address. This is the best we have via Facebook though, and it's just something we have to deal with.
UPDATE 5/10/11
I was browsing around the Facebook documentation, and found a method that exists in the old Legacy REST API which actually allows you to remove extended permissions for your app from a user. I think you could use this exact API call to manage getting non-proxy addresses from your Facebook user, while still using the native install dialog.
I tested this using the FB JS SDK and it worked! The method you need to use is the auth.revokeExtendedPermission method. Here are 2 examples of calling that method via the JS SDK and the PHP SDK.
Javascript:
<script>
FB.api({
method: 'auth.revokeExtendedPermission',
perm: 'read_stream'
}, function(response)
{
console.log(response)
});
</script>
PHP:
<?php
$facebook->api(array(
'method' => 'auth.revokeExtendedPermission',
'perm' => 'email',
'uid' => $uid
));
Because these use the Legacy REST API they're not as "supported" as the new Graph API. I've not seen anything regarding migrating this feature to the Graph API. Hopefully they will.