"love- and commitment-minded" hyphenation before "and"

Solution 1:

Yes, that's the way you do it. An example, one that often gets screwed up, is writing "mid- to late" something, like "in the mid- to late 20th century" or "in his mid- to late thirties." In that example, the second modifier, "late," doesn't take a hyphen, just like saying "late thirties" doesn't, but the first modifier, "mid," does, just like saying "mid-thirties" does.

Another example is the phrasing "five- and ten-dollar bills." If you alternatively write "five and ten dollar bills," it means fifteen one-dollar bills, not five-dollar bills and ten-dollar bills.

A third example is "right- and left- handed." If you write "people who are right and left-handed," for example, it means people who are correct and left-handed, not people who are right-handed and left-handed.

For more information, click the following link and scroll down to "Hanging Hyphens":

https://www.self-pub.net/blog/hyphenation-location/