OP, you sound like you might enjoy the benefits of simultaneous RAW+JPEG shooting. It offers the RAW file if needed, but also produces an in-camera JPEG file for easy viewing, small storage, and in some cases, you would be smart to use the camera's more-advanced features like vignetting control,.highlight tone priority, direct printing sharpening and optimization, dynamic range optimizing, etc,etc. The names of the features vary from brand to brand, but for example, in-camera noise reduction can many times be done BETTER by the camera's internal JPEG processing engine than it can be done by a less-than-expert worker at his or her own computer.
For example, at high ISO levels, in dimmer indoor lighting with no flash, my relatively new Nikon when set to Automatic tone curve adjustment, and High-degree of High ISO Noise Reduction, and its maximum vignetting control option, with in-camera sharpening set three notches above the middle value, can shoot an entire low-light party type event and create gorgeous straight out of camera JPEG images with amazingly good noise reduction, and sharpening that looks great.
You'll find that in on-line forums, you'll get answers about how bad in-camera JPEG processing is, and answers that are way out of date (like 10 year-old information), and which ignores the need for advanced skill using advanced software at the computer. In other words, you will get information that USED TO BE true, but which might not apply to the newer cameras, or which might not apply to YOUR ability level in post-processing. Again, some of the newer d-slrs offer in-camera JPEG processing of images that is actually better than what many people can do on their own, using software and raw files. That is the often-overlooked aspect to your question when it is asked on a forum full of advanced shooters.