Not a soil grower but using a soil that has low nutrient content or no nutrient content and adding a tiny bit yourself while they are young would benefit you. Plants that young need very little nutrients.
Once they grow up a bit you can transplant into something with more nutrients or again into something with none and add fertilizer in proper amounts.
This is vague info and I'm sure some soil guys will pop in to better explain it and the options. Coco is very popular for a number or reasons this being one
Yeah, soil can be confusing. I know how, but it's a pain, too many downsides not enough up sides for me. I start with a soil that doesn't have any nutrients in it. Like what I use for my clones,
promix hp peat coco and perlite. With clones I just wait for them to root, transplant to solo cup, and give it a whack of hydro nutes. By whack I mean 1/2 of what they suggest for seedlings and clones. And its usually enough to make the clone fit the cup.
Then I just give them water. Rootbound plants dont need nutrients, if they show signs of deficiency I micro nute (about an eight of what they say on the bottle) and it's usually cool
But if you were to grow it out in soil. You would feed once a week, the day or two before your weekly feeding, collect your runoff and sample it. Keep it in the ppm range of whatever stage growth you're in, and you should have an uncle Bob.
But it's all such a pain in the ass compared to coco. Lol