I took her out and ran down the road for a plug chop, and its just slightly on the rich side. This e3.12 plug works much better and I was able to get a good reading off of it showing its slightly rich (reddish brown), which the ride confirmed. Since its about 60F out, and it will be colder on average this winter during the day this setting should work well.
Some things I was remembered of from way back, you gotta warm the engine up completely before running, or the plug will wet foul. A plug with a skinnier strap would probably work better before fully warmed up, the E3's have split strap that doesn't run as hot, and it's cross referenced to 6-8 heat range plugs from other brands. I would consider it more of an 8, they claim the catalytic coating on the strap helps low temp self cleaning, but the real benefit of these plugs comes from reduced misfires from multiple arc paths, as it didn't skip a beat once hot. At the autoparts store they had a NGK equivalent to this plug, but it had shorter threads and wouldn't protude into the combustion chamber as far, the E3 goes the correct length into the chamber and wouldn't drop the compression a point or two, so I figured it's the way to go, and more closely matches the NGK BH8s recommended for these (which has a long body which doesn't fit the chopper well, and arcs through the cap).
Another thing to note about this type of carburetor is that it has four different circuits that control the fuel delivery through the powerband, and that if I pulled full throttle before getting to high speed, it went into the main jet which is too rich for mid-rpms. The proper way to ride with this Dellorto PHBG is to gradually twist the throttle so it transitions through the four different circuits with their respective jets. When I rode like that on the return run, the engine ran like a top, forgot how much of a buzz this thing gives you just from the amazing racing sound!
Edit: Mental note, 75 main jet with this plug.