This is a great question, and one that most Rails developers have probably had to deal with at some point. I've tried loading everything into a constant on boot. I've also tried using Memcached or Redis with a plugin like cached_model or cache_fu and automatically populate the cache when the application boots. However, these approaches only work for finding single objects, and don't integrate with ActiveRecord at all (eg, don't work with associations), as I'm sure you've noticed.
There's an obvious market for a Memcached/Redis plugin with better ActiveRecord integration, but it sounds like an awfully difficult undertaking so I don't think we're likely to see anything soon.
Making the situation worse is the fact that if you're pre-loading a lot of data, you probably don't want to do it on every request in the development environment, which is hard to avoid because models are lazy-loaded (and reloaded on every request) in development and presumably you need the model to load the data. This means that a good solution must be tightly integrated with ActiveRecord so it works whether the data is coming from the DB or the cache (if you don't pre-load in development).
Anyway, sorry for the long-winded non-answer, but I think discussion may be the best we can do at this point.
Hopefully I'm wrong. Anybody?