GDT: ECQF Game 5: Your New Jersey Devils vs. New York Rangers, 7:30 PM, MSGSN/ESPN2

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Incharge1976

Registered User
Mar 4, 2011
1,797
1,667
Yea you can’t go back to that well again. I thought it was odd to play that card in the first place after game 4 which was a one goal game (plus empty netter), in which they even tied it up in the third before losing. From an outsiders perspective that would be a time to preach calm.

Here's the thing and I said this after the game 2 loss. All they needed to do was get a win to be a different team. They were passing around a hand grenade the first two games. Gallant knows what is up. He knows the only game the Rangers beat the Devils during the season was when it went to 3 on 3.

I'll put it this way. They were fortunate they had a very young team who was obviously nervous the first two games. Had this been in round 2 with Akira in net and the Devils having gotten rid of their greenie status, they maybe win one if they are lucky.
 

NjDevsRR

Anything Can Happen In Jersey
Apr 24, 2012
28,750
57,368
Belmar
That chant has no karma value at all, does not effect shit.

Now, sneaking down through the club seats with five mins to go during game 2, banging at the glass near Lindy and screaming to start his best players and then running out before security notices. Does that have an effect. Maybe, because thats exactly what I did. ;)
 

Bleedred

Travis Green BLOWS! Bring back Nasreddine!
Sponsor
May 1, 2011
130,392
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If I ate tacos the day of game 2 when we lost, can I eat burrito's instead for tomorrow?
 

NjDevsRR

Anything Can Happen In Jersey
Apr 24, 2012
28,750
57,368
Belmar
If I ate tacos the day of game 2 when we lost, can I eat burrito's instead for tomorrow?

No. Salad Taco, with tons of spiciest hot sauce and hot peppers you can find for screwing up Game 2. Time to Raise Hell.
IMG_7917.jpeg
 

AfroThunder396

[citation needed]
Jan 8, 2006
39,132
23,195
Miami, FL
If you don't care about being traditional, you can make a kick ass beef birria with only about 40 minutes of work the previous day. And then the actual cooking day you set it and forget it.

Here's the recipe I used today:

1 chile de arbol
2 ancho chili
5 guajilo chili

Split and de-seeded. Toss them in a warm pan to toast for 5-10 minutes, until they start getting a little blackened color on the surface. Remove from the pan with tongs and set into a bowl. Cover them with warm water, put a lid on top, and let them steep for 20 minutes.

Now you gotta make your spice mix (I just eyeball it so these are rough measurements, and you can obviously adjust the amounts depending on your individual taste):

2 tbsn smoked paprika
1 tbsn salt
1 tbsn garlic powder
1 tbsn onion powder
1 tbsn cumin powder
1 tbsn dried oregano
1/2 tbsn dried thyme
1/2 tbsn fresh black pepper

Now, wipe down that previous pan or get a new one, and thrown in 1 whole ass stick of butter. Once it's completely melted, add a whole white onion (sliced) and your spice mix. Let it simmer for about 10 mins or until the onions get limp and sugary. In the last two minutes or so, add a shit load of minced garlic (I used about a head's worth, but I like it very garlicky).

Into a blender add:

-Your aromatics + spice mix (and the spice butter)
-Your rehydrated peppers
-Your steeped pepper water (it should smell like raisins)
-1 small can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (rinse out the can with some of your pepper juice)

Blend until smooth. That's the basic recipe for your chipotle puree. If you go with just this it's going to be fantastic, but the thing I've learned with Mexican cooking is that you just keep adding shit and more shit with no upper limit.

I put in a heaping tbsn of caldo de pollo, (Mexican chicken bullion, this shit is like crack and is my secret ingredient in all sorts of savory dishes) in addition to a splash of soy sauce, some honey, and a dribble of molasses just for some umphh.

Then you're done. If you taste it, it should be wayyyy too spicy to taste. That's normal, it will mellow out in the slow cooker. I'm not sure if it's the beef fat cutting through or just the cooking process itself. But of course, if you hate spice then just don't use a chile de arbol at the beginning and/or only use the adobo sauce from the canned stuff (and throw the chilies themselves out).

Tomorrow I'll add this puree to my slow cooker with some water (~2 cups), a splash of orange juice, a splash of whiskey, a splash of lime juice. Then you throw in a cinnamon stick (or two) and a bay leaf (or two). Let that get up to temperature.

Then all you've got to do is sear the hell out of your meat for a little flavor and texture. You want a really fatty cut of beef, I'm going with a chuck steak. Previously I threw short ribs in there alongside it, and while they were delicious I found it to be a lot of work for not a huge yield.

Sear it on both sides, toss it into your slow cooker with the sauce, give it a few hours until it gets fork tender, and then you're ready to roll. Remove your meat and shred it into small pieces, then put it back in the stew.

You'll want to siphon off the layer of beef fat that's collected on the top. You'll dip your tortillas in that before you fry them up. Labor intensive, but super worth it IMO. While they're frying, pile in your shredded beef and a bit of cheese. Oaxaca is the best but whole milk mozzarella is a perfectly great substitute. The best is when a little cheese leaks out and gets nice and crispy edges with a little caramelization.

Garnish with fresh cilantro. I usually serve with a side bowl of the birria stew and some crema for drizzling/dipping. People love to add homemade pickled onions to their tacos, I'm not a big fan of them though. The beef + cheese + a little crema is good enough for me.
 
Last edited:

Emperoreddy

Show Me What You Got!
Apr 13, 2010
130,502
76,073
New Jersey, Exit 16E
If you don't care about being traditional, you can make a kick ass beef birria with only about 40 minutes of work the previous day. And then the actual cooking day you set it and forget it.

Here's the recipe I used today:

1 chile de arbol
2 ancho chili
5 guajilo chili

Split and de-seeded. Toss them in a warm pan to toast for 5-10 minutes, until they start getting a little blackened color on the surface. Remove from the pan with tongs and set into a bowl. Cover them with warm water, put a lid on top, and let them steep for 20 minutes.

Now you gotta make your spice mix (I just eyeball it so these are rough measurements, and you can obviously adjust the amounts depending on your individual taste):

2 tbsn smoked paprika
1 tbsn salt
1 tbsn garlic powder
1 tbsn onion powder
1 tbsn cumin powder
1 tbsn dried oregano
1/2 tbsn dried thyme
1/2 tbsn fresh black pepper

Now, wipe down that previous pan or get a new one, and thrown in 1 whole ass stick of butter. Once it's completely melted, add a whole white onion (sliced) and your spice mix. Let it simmer for about 10 mins or until the onions get limp and sugary. In the last two minutes or so, ad a shit load of minced garlic (I used about a head's worth, but I like it very garlicky).

Into a blender add:

-Your aromatics + spice mix (and the spice butter)
-Your rehydrated peppers
-Your steeped pepper water (it should smell like raisins)
-1 small can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (rinse out the can with some of your pepper juice

Blend until smooth. That's the basic recipe for your chipotle puree. You can add other things, too. I put in a heaping tbsn of caldo de pollo, (Mexican chicken bullion, this shit is like crack and is my secret ingredient in all sorts of savory dishes) in addition to a splash of soy sauce and molasses just for some umphh.

Then you're done. If you taste it, it should be wayyyy too spicy to taste. That's normal, it will mellow out in the slow cooker. I'm not sure if it's the beef fat cutting through or just the cooking process itself. But of course, if you hate spice then just don't use a chile de arbol at the beginning and/or only use the adobo sauce from the canned stuff (and throw the chilies themselves out).

Tomorrow I'll add this puree to my slow cooker with some water (~2 cups), a splash of orange juice, a splash of whiskey, a splash of lime juice. Then you throw in a cinnamon stick (or two) and a bay leaf (or two). Let that get up to temperature.

Then all you've got to do is sear the hell out of your meat for a little flavor and texture. You want a really fatty cut of beef, I'm going with a chuck steak. Previously I threw short ribs in there alongside it, and while they were delicious I found it to be a lot of work for not a huge yield.

Sear it on both sides, toss it into your slow cooker with the sauce, give it a few hours until it gets fork tender, and then you're ready to roll. Remove your meat and shred it into small pieces, then put it back in the stew.

You'll want to siphon off the layer of beef fat that's collected on the top. You'll dip your tortillas in that before you fry them up. Labor intensive, but super worth it IMO. While they're frying, pile in your shredded beef and a bit of cheese. Oaxaca is the best but whole milk mozzarella is a perfectly great substitute. The best is when a little cheese leaks out and gets nice and crispy edges with a little caramelization.

Garnish with fresh cilantro. I usually serve with a side bowl of the birria stew and some crema for drizzling/dipping. People love to add homemade pickled onions to their tacos, I'm not a big fan of them though. The beef + cheese + a little crema is good enough for me.

Now this is good karma
 

The Devil In I

Registered User
Jun 28, 2005
4,184
1,131
Chicago
While on the topic of karma...

To keep if brief, I don't talk to my father for good reasons. Effectively no relationship at all for 20-25 years. The last words we had exchanged were after he found out my mom died a few years ago. This scumbag found me on fb and messaged "Lets Go Rangers!!! 😂" in an antagonistic way, knowing I'm a Devils fan, after game 1.

This series turnaround, and him never getting to witness the Rangers win shit for the rest of his life, is karma. f*** the Rangers.
 

Camille the Eel

Registered User
If you don't care about being traditional, you can make a kick ass beef birria with only about 40 minutes of work the previous day. And then the actual cooking day you set it and forget it.

Here's the recipe I used today:

1 chile de arbol
2 ancho chili
5 guajilo chili

Split and de-seeded. Toss them in a warm pan to toast for 5-10 minutes, until they start getting a little blackened color on the surface. Remove from the pan with tongs and set into a bowl. Cover them with warm water, put a lid on top, and let them steep for 20 minutes.

Now you gotta make your spice mix (I just eyeball it so these are rough measurements, and you can obviously adjust the amounts depending on your individual taste):

2 tbsn smoked paprika
1 tbsn salt
1 tbsn garlic powder
1 tbsn onion powder
1 tbsn cumin powder
1 tbsn dried oregano
1/2 tbsn dried thyme
1/2 tbsn fresh black pepper

Now, wipe down that previous pan or get a new one, and thrown in 1 whole ass stick of butter. Once it's completely melted, add a whole white onion (sliced) and your spice mix. Let it simmer for about 10 mins or until the onions get limp and sugary. In the last two minutes or so, add a shit load of minced garlic (I used about a head's worth, but I like it very garlicky).

Into a blender add:

-Your aromatics + spice mix (and the spice butter)
-Your rehydrated peppers
-Your steeped pepper water (it should smell like raisins)
-1 small can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (rinse out the can with some of your pepper juice)

Blend until smooth. That's the basic recipe for your chipotle puree. If you go with just this it's going to be fantastic, but the thing I've learned with Mexican cooking is that you just keep adding shit and more shit with no upper limit.

I put in a heaping tbsn of caldo de pollo, (Mexican chicken bullion, this shit is like crack and is my secret ingredient in all sorts of savory dishes) in addition to a splash of soy sauce, some honey, and a dribble of molasses just for some umphh.

Then you're done. If you taste it, it should be wayyyy too spicy to taste. That's normal, it will mellow out in the slow cooker. I'm not sure if it's the beef fat cutting through or just the cooking process itself. But of course, if you hate spice then just don't use a chile de arbol at the beginning and/or only use the adobo sauce from the canned stuff (and throw the chilies themselves out).

Tomorrow I'll add this puree to my slow cooker with some water (~2 cups), a splash of orange juice, a splash of whiskey, a splash of lime juice. Then you throw in a cinnamon stick (or two) and a bay leaf (or two). Let that get up to temperature.

Then all you've got to do is sear the hell out of your meat for a little flavor and texture. You want a really fatty cut of beef, I'm going with a chuck steak. Previously I threw short ribs in there alongside it, and while they were delicious I found it to be a lot of work for not a huge yield.

Sear it on both sides, toss it into your slow cooker with the sauce, give it a few hours until it gets fork tender, and then you're ready to roll. Remove your meat and shred it into small pieces, then put it back in the stew.

You'll want to siphon off the layer of beef fat that's collected on the top. You'll dip your tortillas in that before you fry them up. Labor intensive, but super worth it IMO. While they're frying, pile in your shredded beef and a bit of cheese. Oaxaca is the best but whole milk mozzarella is a perfectly great substitute. The best is when a little cheese leaks out and gets nice and crispy edges with a little caramelization.

Garnish with fresh cilantro. I usually serve with a side bowl of the birria stew and some crema for drizzling/dipping. People love to add homemade pickled onions to their tacos, I'm not a big fan of them though. The beef + cheese + a little crema is good enough for me.
We need a NJ Devils Board cookbook. Like those recipe books the ladies auxiliary do at churches.
 
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Bleedred

Travis Green BLOWS! Bring back Nasreddine!
Sponsor
May 1, 2011
130,392
57,861
Sorry, typo: You* should try meditating.
Your hate for some goalies is funny, but I don’t know if it’s good for you!
Nope

f*** Domingue, he’s trash.

The hate went dormant until he went and fueled the Rangers last year.

And after he won a couple games some goofball started a thread asking where he would play in the NHL this year lol.

I had a nice bump of it when the series ended, but no cared anymore.
 

swiiscompos

Registered User
Dec 9, 2018
1,033
1,477
London, UK
Nope

f*** Domingue, he’s trash.

The hate went dormant until he went and fueled the Rangers last year.

And after he won a couple games some goofball started a thread asking where he would play in the NHL this year lol.

I had a nice bump of it when the series ended, but no cared anymore.
If we win this series it will make our victory even sweeter! The Rangers fans were oh so convinced that last year was only a first step and that this year they could go even further.
 

britdevil

Tea with milk...
Feb 15, 2007
26,173
12,361
UK
If you don't care about being traditional, you can make a kick ass beef birria with only about 40 minutes of work the previous day. And then the actual cooking day you set it and forget it.

Here's the recipe I used today:

1 chile de arbol
2 ancho chili
5 guajilo chili

Split and de-seeded. Toss them in a warm pan to toast for 5-10 minutes, until they start getting a little blackened color on the surface. Remove from the pan with tongs and set into a bowl. Cover them with warm water, put a lid on top, and let them steep for 20 minutes.

Now you gotta make your spice mix (I just eyeball it so these are rough measurements, and you can obviously adjust the amounts depending on your individual taste):

2 tbsn smoked paprika
1 tbsn salt
1 tbsn garlic powder
1 tbsn onion powder
1 tbsn cumin powder
1 tbsn dried oregano
1/2 tbsn dried thyme
1/2 tbsn fresh black pepper

Now, wipe down that previous pan or get a new one, and thrown in 1 whole ass stick of butter. Once it's completely melted, add a whole white onion (sliced) and your spice mix. Let it simmer for about 10 mins or until the onions get limp and sugary. In the last two minutes or so, add a shit load of minced garlic (I used about a head's worth, but I like it very garlicky).

Into a blender add:

-Your aromatics + spice mix (and the spice butter)
-Your rehydrated peppers
-Your steeped pepper water (it should smell like raisins)
-1 small can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (rinse out the can with some of your pepper juice)

Blend until smooth. That's the basic recipe for your chipotle puree. If you go with just this it's going to be fantastic, but the thing I've learned with Mexican cooking is that you just keep adding shit and more shit with no upper limit.

I put in a heaping tbsn of caldo de pollo, (Mexican chicken bullion, this shit is like crack and is my secret ingredient in all sorts of savory dishes) in addition to a splash of soy sauce, some honey, and a dribble of molasses just for some umphh.

Then you're done. If you taste it, it should be wayyyy too spicy to taste. That's normal, it will mellow out in the slow cooker. I'm not sure if it's the beef fat cutting through or just the cooking process itself. But of course, if you hate spice then just don't use a chile de arbol at the beginning and/or only use the adobo sauce from the canned stuff (and throw the chilies themselves out).

Tomorrow I'll add this puree to my slow cooker with some water (~2 cups), a splash of orange juice, a splash of whiskey, a splash of lime juice. Then you throw in a cinnamon stick (or two) and a bay leaf (or two). Let that get up to temperature.

Then all you've got to do is sear the hell out of your meat for a little flavor and texture. You want a really fatty cut of beef, I'm going with a chuck steak. Previously I threw short ribs in there alongside it, and while they were delicious I found it to be a lot of work for not a huge yield.

Sear it on both sides, toss it into your slow cooker with the sauce, give it a few hours until it gets fork tender, and then you're ready to roll. Remove your meat and shred it into small pieces, then put it back in the stew.

You'll want to siphon off the layer of beef fat that's collected on the top. You'll dip your tortillas in that before you fry them up. Labor intensive, but super worth it IMO. While they're frying, pile in your shredded beef and a bit of cheese. Oaxaca is the best but whole milk mozzarella is a perfectly great substitute. The best is when a little cheese leaks out and gets nice and crispy edges with a little caramelization.

Garnish with fresh cilantro. I usually serve with a side bowl of the birria stew and some crema for drizzling/dipping. People love to add homemade pickled onions to their tacos, I'm not a big fan of them though. The beef + cheese + a little crema is good enough for me.

homer-simpson.gif
 

glenwo2

LINDY RUFF NEEDS VIAGRA!!
Oct 18, 2008
52,067
24,354
New Jersey(No Fanz!)
Bahl is really making the loss of Muk much easier to absorb. I was skeptical Bahl would have a long term future here just due to someone like Muk and getting lost in the huge pile of depth we have in D prospects, but using Muk in the Timo trade gave him that opening.

At the very least I think he'll be a pretty good #6/bottom pairing guy.
At the rate he's playing, he might end up in the top Six pairing.
 
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HoliksGhost

Registered User
Oct 24, 2007
2,712
1,952
Pumped that Mercer is regaining his confidence. One more thing for the Rangers to worry now after that shortie. We were freaking flying last night !
 
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