Proper process development for solvent-based separation and purification of multicomponent solid mixtures should be based on a proper understanding of the material properties of the product, impurities, and their solid-state mixture. The layout of those properties reflected by their mixing and demixing behaviors resulting from the molecular interactions can neatly be captured in a phase diagram. However, the level of difficulty in constructing a phase diagram is dependent on the number of components being involved. Additionally, a full construction of a phase diagram would be impossible to carry out if the pure standards of the impurities are unavailable, making its adoption for the separation of solid mixtures to be somewhat limited. In this work, a concept of the quasi-ternary phase diagram method is proposed by combining all unknown impurities into one single entity, in effect creating a ternary system of solid productsolid impurities-liquid solvent. In this way, as long as the pure product and solvent are available, a ternary phase diagram of this system can be established and used as a guideline for designing the separation process of this product substance. This concept has been validated against curcumin, where oleoresin obtained from turmeric extraction with 25% purity was purified into a curcumin product with >98% purity.