Here's what the appliance repairman put in his off-grid house about a year ago.
Kitchen,
Range: 1948 Okeefe and Merritt, 40" wide, top re-chromed, converted to LP, pilot lights, old school.
Fridge: 1952(?) Servel (Thanks Dan!)
Dishwasher: The wife and I, she washes, I rinse, we talk and look out the kitchen window. Maybe 15 minutes total time invested in the evening. My wife washes dishes like a banshee but we used to have an automatic dishwasher when we lived on grid and I truly do not see a great deal of time saved between loading/unloading the thing and washing by hand. We also have 24" of extra cabinet space in the kitchen. I would never go back, even if I had to wash and rinse and put-away by myself.
Laundry,
Washer: had an older Kenmore front loader, now got a HE3. Bigger but has a few phantom watts so got to shut it down on a power strip
Dryer: Eeeh whatever LP unit I have laying around. Current one is a Whirlpool, efficiency between brands is negligibile IMO.
You didn't mention how you were planning on producing your electricity, but if a significant amount is from solar, I will tell you that we seem to have more electricity than we know what to do with in the summer months, and I'm all solar at the moment. An in-the-refrigerator icemaker can be shut off at any time by lifting up the lever. I tend to use way more ice in the summer than in the winter (due to the nature of distilled spirits) so if you truly have enough electricity for an electric fridge, I'd think an icemaker would just be a bonus as you can shut it off with discretion.
We're actually planning to go to an electric fridge soon but need to increase our power supply first. Personally, I wouldn't buy one without an icemaker, because of my friend Jameson.
Like others said, watch out for glow bar ignition on the range. Either confirm it has spark ignition (and usually eat the phantom watts for the electronic control) or just get pilot lights all around.