Do read all the previous posts about inverters and batteries, as most any question you have will already be answered there. But the Watts on the on the label is how many Watts the appliance draws. Watts divided by volts = amps. A 900 Watt coffee maker divided by 120 volts is 7.5 amps. But since you'll be running it off a 12-volt inverter, it would be 900 divided by 12 = 75 amps from the batteries. If you run the coffee maker for one hour, that's 75 amp hours. If you run it for 15 minutes, it's 18.75 amp hours. If you run it for 8 hours, then it's 600 amp hours.
It's how many amps the appliance draws, and for how many hours it'll draw it between fully recharging the battery. If you have an 8 Watt lamp, that's 0.66 amps from the battery, and if you run it for 6 hours a day, that's 6 hrs X .66 = 4 amp hours.
Once you figure out how many amp hours you'll draw in a, say, 24 hour period, then you'd double that figure to get the minimum size of the battery bank amp hour capacity. A small cube fridge that draws 1.3 amps at 120 volts AC (156 Watts) will draw 13 amps as 12 volts DC. Over a 24 hour period the fridge alone will draw 312 amp hours. Of course, the fridge won't be running 24/7 and it'll actually draw between 150 and 200 amps, but you get the idea.
The reason you need twice as many amps hours of capacity in the battery bank as the amps you'll draw is, you don't want to ever draw the battery bank down below 50% Depth of Discharge, because every time you do it will dramatically shorten the life of the battery.
One note: make a conscious effort to make certain the charging switch is "off" when you shut the van off, otherwise you could be stuck on a side street in Miami Beach on a Sunday evening waiting for your road club to come jump the main battery. Just sayin'....
That's why wiring the aux batteries into the main battery without using a battery isolator is a really bad idea.