First and foremost...find a drummer with a finely tuned kit. The simplest and most successful commercial set-up I've heard of involves 4 mics...a kick mic, a snare mic, and two overhead microphones. Glyn Johns used it to record the Stones/Clapton/The Who...and on and on. Here are the basics...
Recording Drums: The Glyn Johns Method
I don't pan as much as suggested...but I guess it's a matter of taste.
Funny how it took a "newbie" like me to mention Glyn Johns.
This method works very well, best if the room sounds good (but ain't that always the way?). As mentioned, the kit should also be tuned well - you can't polish a turd, you can only sculpt it into a better shaped turd, and you will get crap all over your fingers doing it.
The advantage to using less mics on a kit of course is it's easier to achieve phase alignment. I usually use 7 mics around a 4-piece kit (k, sn top, sn bottom, rack tom, floor tom, l and r overhead) + room mics to suit the situation, and I spend a fair amount of time listening and nudging mics into correct position. With 4 mics it's a doddle. Remember, the overheads in the Glyn Johns method are the main sound, and the snare and kick are "spot mics" - it's like stereo pair orchestra recording with spot mics on solo instruments.
To the original poster: try this with your NT-5s as the overheads, the 57 on snare (1 inch in from the rim pointing to the centre of the snare), and the 58 inside the kick (you will probably need to compress and eq the kick channel a fair bit in the mix). Like "danbortz" above, I don't pan as much as suggested in the linked article, but it's up to you. You could use the sE condenser as a room mic - try placing it out the front of the kit (say 5 feet away), about the height of the top of the kick drum. Move it closer or further away, depending on what you hear (check it for phase with the overheads, one mic at a time). You should be able to get a nice thud from the kick and a little more snare bottom perhaps. Don't worry about the hats - they will be picked up nicely in balance by the o/heads if the drummer knows how to play alright.
Cheers, Brento
(Newbie! Grrrr! I've been doing this for twenty-five years....)