I'll go ahead and put in a couple more cents worth as I used to do lab work with gasoline. Gasoline is a mixture of hundreds of different hydrocarbon compounds. Pump automotive gasoline usually has ethanol and some detergents added as well. As 74M35A2 said, the difference between summer and winter blend is in the vapor pressure of the mixture, and this is achieved by adding proportioinately more low boiling point compounds in the winter blend, and more high boiling point compounds in the summer blend. It used to be a lot bigger deal when everything had carburetors - too high a vapor pressure results in vapor lock and carburetor fires. Too low a vapor pressure makes for hard starting in winter. Fuel injected engines are much less sensitive to these differences, so we can often get away with out of season fuel much more easily.
Ethanol always seems to encourage biology to happen in gasoline, both because it entrains water and because there are microorganisms everywhere that digest ethanol (thanks for nothing, midwestern corn farmers). I'd do whatever was necessary to avoid getting E10. For long term storage you will need to add an antioxidant/biocide containing EDTA - probably a lot of it. Store it as cool as possible (underground/basement is ideal) and with an airlock as used in wine and beer fermentation with the airlock fluid being oil plus biocide. Back in the bad old days gasoline came with lots of tetraethyl lead in it, which is an excellent biocide, but it is also unfortunately bad for humans and catalytic converters.
As for what to store, I would definitely lean toward a summer blend, as lower vapor pressure fuels are less prone to boil off in hot weather and won't have the vapor lock problems you can get with winter blend fuel in summer. As diesel folks can tell you, diesel fuel keeps a lot longer than gasoline does, and part of that is due to the lower vapor pressure of the fuel.
If you want to use the stored summer blend fuel in winter, I would recommend freshening it by adding 10% of recent winter blend fuel to the engine's fuel tank if you experience starting problems. All you need is a high vapor pressure component to get the cold engine to catch and run. A shot of ether would work as well.