Leviticus 2:6-16

6 And thou shalt break them into fragments and pour oil upon them: it is a sacrifice to the Lord.
7 And if thy gift be a sacrifice from the hearth, it shall be made of fine flour with oil.
8 And he shall offer the sacrifice which he shall make of these to the Lord, and shall bring it to the priest.
9 And the priest shall approach the altar, and shall take away from the sacrifice a memorial of it, and the priest shall place it on the altar: a burnt offering, a smell of sweet savour to the Lord.
10 And that which is left of the sacrifice for Aaron and his sons, most holy from the burnt-offerings of the Lord.
11 Ye shall not leaven any sacrifice which ye shall bring to the Lord; for any leaven, or any honey, ye shall not bring of it to offer a gift to the Lord.
12 Ye shall bring them in the way of fruits to the Lord, but they shall not be offered on the altar for a sweet-smelling savour to the Lord.
13 And every gift of your sacrifice shall be seasoned with salt; omit not the salt of the covenant of the Lord from your sacrifices: on every gift of yours ye shall offer salt to the Lord your God.
14 And if thou wouldest offer a sacrifice of first-fruits to the Lord, new grains ground roasted for the Lord; so shalt thou bring the sacrifice of the first-fruits.
15 And thou shalt pour oil upon it, and shalt put frankincense on it: it is a sacrifice.
16 And the priest shall offer the memorial of it from the grains with the oil, and all its frankincense: it is a burnt-offering to the Lord.

Leviticus 2:6-16 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO LEVITICUS 2

This chapter contains the law of the meat offering, and gives an account of what it was made of, fine flour, with oil poured, and frankincense put upon it, Le 2:1 what was done with it; part of it burnt upon the altar, and the rest was the property of the priests, Le 2:2,3,8-10 how it was to be when baked in an oven, or in a pan, or fried in a frying pan, Le 2:4-7 what was prohibited in it, leaven and honey, Le 2:11 what was to be used in it, salt, Le 2:13 and what was to be the oblation and meat offering of the first fruits, and what to be done with it, Le 2:12,14-16.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.