Depending on the ceramic, anywhere from near 1000 K to over 3000 K. But you're right, I was looking at it from the point of energy efficiency, not from the point of what's practical. Even if it's possible, you're looking at prohibitively high costs for insulation and material costs for heat exchangers. Not to mention the cost of keeping the stuff hot during a maintenance shutdown (might be less of a problem if used for long term storage, but if your system is rated for a down time of 5 days and the maintenance takes 2 weeks you got a problem.)
Also the reason that it takes so long for a technology to diffuse into the industry probably has to do with the fact that most plants are designed to run for several decades or more. Engineers aren't too keen on using technologies that haven't proven themselves to be fully reliable. Especially in the case of liquid salt, I could imagine it's quite difficult to do unscheduled maintenance, because the salt has to be kept hot and probably also has to be kept flowing to prevent solidification. I also don't know the viscosity of it, but if it's high, heat exchangers and pipes also have to be designed to avoid hot spots. And even if the technology has proven itself, most plants are partial rebuilds of older plants or additions to existing sites, where the installation of a new technology like liquid salt heat transport would be very expensive compared to using the already existing steam networks.
Also it seems I got my numbers mixed up. Some salts have a heat capacity of 38 cal/mole*K, which I mistook for 3.8 j/g*K. That'll teach me to rapidly browse a document.