I'd be tempted to go with a wind generator. You normally need the power in the evenings. Up here in winter it's dark at 1600 so lights are on until about midnight, 8 hrs. If you had a deep cycle you could consume that in the evenings from the juice you had stored up during the day. But they are pricey.
I would be seriously tempted to skip the panels and use a wind generator which would simply chuff away all day and night offsetting your consumption. I reckon most houses can get by on <1kWh. There will be peaks when kettles go on, washing machines etc but they should be short lived relatively speaking.
I got the array in Feb 2013, so far I have had a shade over £4k from my FIT payments. The 16 panel array cost £7.5K. So after 7 years I am about half way paid off. I get about 20p per unit, I started at 15p but it's supposedly index linked.
This is me running right now, left box is input to the grid so about 1Kw the right one is output. Right now I am self sufficient. Fridge, clocks, PC etc. I work from home so this is my usual run rate.
This is me with all my downstairs lights and TV on and there are a lot of lights! All low energy but the wee green pip you can see on the output box is me starting to consume energy. This is way more than would normally be on of an evening.
If I now put on the kettle (which is a fast boiler) we're into the amber. Putting an electric shower on is scary! The washing machine and dishy use less power than the kettle.
I think we have saved a lot on power over the last 7 years, we pretty much use zero in the hours of daylight. A windmill would extend this to the evenings too assuming there is some wind about. I haven't looked at them seriously but they are worth a poke.
Hope this helps,
Alan