Don't know specifically about F1 engines, but if you've ever seen an NHRA top fuel car engine being started, they have to squirt gasoline into the intake to get the engine to start. The nitromethane fuel they use is actually quite difficult to ignite.
Another peculiar procedure is the one that Champ Car engines used for shut down when they ran methanol fuel. Before they put the car away for the day, they had to run some gasoline through the engine to flush out any methanol in the fuel system. They called it "pickling" the engine. And it was necessary due to the corrosive nature of methanol fuel. Any methanol left in the engine would quickly dissolve things like magnesium intake plenum castings.