I believe that raking the rudders is only effective for changing the amount of force on the tiller, not for changing the helm characteristics of the boat.
For the following explanation, please refer to the diagram on page 4 of this article on rudder rake:
http://w1dm.com/11%20Winter%20Hotline%20TOH.pdfI know there is a bit of confusion out there on rudder rake and helm, as many sailors sometimes simplify weather helm as the amount of pull on the tiller. While excessive weather helm will result in excessive tiller pull, the two are distinctly different. Weather helm, or the tendency of the boat to turn into the wind when no input is received from the rudders, is caused by the moment arm created by the difference in longitudinal position of the center of effort (CE) of the sail plan and the center of lateral resistance (CLR) of the daggerboards and underwater hull. The CE needs to be aft of the CLR in order for the boat to have weather helm - the resultant force on the sails tends to rotate the boat around the CLR to turn the boat upwind. The rudders are then used to counteract that moment and keep the boat on a straight course, by creating an additional force to help oppose the resultant force on the sails and balance the two, thereby cancelling out the moment it creates. Neutral helm (boat sails straight with no steering input) is the result of the CE and CLR being in the same longitudinal location, and Lee helm (boat tends to turn down away from the wind) is caused by the CE being ahead of the CLR. The only way to correct the latter two is by raking the mast further aft or altering the sailplan - smaller jib, jib furled, bigger/more efficient main, etc. Weather helm is desirable, as you have mentioned, to keep the boat from sailing away on it's own.
Rudder rake, on the other hand, primarily adjusts the amount of "pull" the tiller has when sailing upwind. Raking the rudders further forward moves the hydrodynamic center (HC) of the rudders closer in line with the axis about which they pivot, reducing the amount of pull you need on the tiller to keep them straight. Raking them further aft moves the HC of the rudders further from the axis of rotation, increasing the force on the tiller arm required to keep them straight.
If the problem is too much/too little feedback from the tiller, rake the rudders fore or aft (respectively). If the problem is with excessive weather helm, neutral helm or lee helm, rake the mast fore or aft (again, respectively) to correct the problem.
As srm said, weather helm alone is not enough to keep you safe when sailing solo. The boat can cover a long distance before turning head to wind, or there could be waves or current that conspire to keep it sailing/drifting away from you. If you're not going to be around other boaters, use extreme caution and either file a "sail plan" or keep your phone, a marine radio, gps, EPIRB, etc. on your body.