I've been using a variant of the no-chill method for my batches. A lot of folks call for a modified hop schedule to account for a longer time spent at higher temps... Usually this means shifting bittering and flavor hop additions by 20 minutes (i.e. the 60 minute addition goes in at 40 mins., the 30 at 10m, etc.)
This allows me to boil for 20 mins. and get a good hot break. I then pull a 1/2 gallon of wort before the 1st hop addition to use as my Real Wort Starter (RWS). Once cooled, it goes onto the stirplate. I usually let it go 12-18 hours until my "no-chilled" wort is down to pitching temps.
I pitch the entire half gallon of RWS off the stir plate into the fermentor, as it's was originally part of the "correct volume" to begin with. And since its the same wort (minus hops and another 30 minutes of boiling), there's no DME/LME starter beer to decant off anyway.
I have wondered if this is too short of a ferment time for the starters but I generally have little lag, fairly active fermentation, and tasty final products. I don't know if I'm pitching at the optimal rate though.