If you are planning to keep the boat for a reasonable amount of time then suggest you invest in AGMs, at least for the service bank. Capacity in the region of 200-250 AH is adequate - my 33 has 3*95AH AGMs and I never get near 50% discharge, even running the fridge 24 hours when cruising. Well stocked with bottles of cold water to fill the empty space, the fridge uses around 2.5amps on average, so 60 in 24 hours. The 60amp alternator is not really a constraint as the bank if well charged to start with is limited in its ability to take charge. Even though I have a 115amp alternator, I rarely see more than 25 amps charge. AGMs have very slow self discharge, so leaving them for 2 weeks is not an issue and solar will enable you to recharge during the time away. The only times capacity becomes an issue is if you spend long periods at anchor with no other charging source other than solar, but that does not seem like the way you are going to use your boat.
For the engine start a normal car type battery of around 70AH is more than adequate, although my choice would be a Red Flash 1200. This is small enough such that you could fit 3*AGMs alongside in the battery compartment.
If you don't want to spend that kind of money then a pair of 110AH deep cycle lead acid will fit alongside your engine start battery. I had this on my last boat (a 37) and even with that never experienced capacity problems in "weekend" type sailing.
Worth fitting a battery monitor so that you can keep a check on your usage, as well as adopting power saving things like LEDs for all lights.