Sorry if I'm getting cloudy on ethanol: truth is, I detest it (that's the most polite word I can use...).
But, all the non-ethanol fuels we seem to be able to get now are always Premium grades, which will foul plugs in these bikes today because it burns very, very slowly compared to the 1970s gas that the bikes were designed to. Airplane gas (which is non-ethanol) is even worse: one local rider here who has a CB750F0, which has a bit higher compression, had to jet all the way down to #100 mainjets because he uses aviation gas that he can get at the airport where he works: it kept fouling his plugs with normal jetting, but he wants to use that gas (120 octane rated). This isn't a great idea either, because if he takes off to the flatlands below 5000 feet high he will burn the valves when the "normal" premium will ping/knock with the #100 mainjets - too small.
Mostly, I recommend Midgrade or Regular today, primarily because of the slow-burn nature of modern fuels in order to support catalytic convertors. The old 1970s Premium burn speed was somewhere in between the modern Regular and Midgrade fuels.
My 'best' advice about the gas situation now is: add a little oil to the gas, whatever gas you use. If it has ethanol in it, this will bind with the ethanol so it won't attack the rubber intake hoses on the 750 (the others SOHC4 bikes have aluminum intake pipes). If it DOESN'T have ethanol in it, it will still lube the valve stems and guides, which unleaded gas won't do. This has worked on my 750 ever since ethanol started (and it also helped a LOT against MTBE when we suffered that). My intake hoses only died at 126k miles because I had the engine out for other reasons (storm-caused oil leak) so I just got new ones then. My old ones still worked, and are in my SPARES box today. They are still softer than most of the ones I get with engines now for rebuilds.