Internship
Offer a 3 months paid internship. A paid internship that pays 80K/year (adjust up for area cost of living). (remember, you get what you pay for).
Assign them a major project, and assign them to help other teams for short periods. You'll get the feel of the candidate.
If it doesn't work out, terminate the internship.
If it does work out, offer them a job. If they don't want it, no hard feeling, thank them, and write them a rock-solid recommendation letter. They will thank you dearly, not to mention call you eventually when they're tired of doing crap for corps.
From what I understand, that's how Joel does it. (dunno about the recommendation letter, but I assume that much from Joel).
Buzz
Ultimately, the reason you have to cold-interview people for position is because you haven't created enough buzz about working in your shop, haven't made enough contacts out in programmerland, and are not leveraging your own coworkers' non-work networks.
Work with your local university and the IT/IS faculty. Have a presence at meet-the-firms. Do stuff with student IT associations. Sponsor extra-credit projects. You'll get to know the smart students. And you'll be able to cherrypick the top of the class.
Your Company
The flip side of the coin is that your company may not be such a great place to work. You need to make sure that always-connected always-moving genYers feel comfortable in your environment. The sit-in-a-cube-and-grind might pay the bills but probably can't get 23 years old Joe excited enough about your place to tell his IS457 buddies about sending in their resumes.
Do you pass the Joel Test(1)? Is your management really "Get them the tools, access, and information they need and get the hell out of the way" or does it want to manage through process and weekly one-on-one meetings? Rock stars are like air-to-air missiles: bring them close to the target, then fire and forget, watch the fireworks, and check items off the todo-list.
No? You might want to fix that before you go trying to hire the best and brightest. It would be sad for you to actually get a highly motivated, highly competent, fired-up "great hacker" only to demoralize and shackle him within 6 months and watch him leave, his eyes set on new horizons.
Skillz
By the way, age matters not. A 23 years old can have 10 years programming experience. And he might know more about Ruby on Rails, Linux, PHP, and web development in general than 2/3 of your staff, especially those who collect the hefty salary thanks to years of service and lofty seniority-generated titles. I say this as a 23+16yo.
Instead, manage him expertly, then watch him bloom into a powerhouse. Let him keep challenging himself.
Productivity
See http://www.redmonk.com/cote/2007/02/19/gaming-your-context-or-methodology-by-constraints/ for more in that vein (including the comments) Note that I am quoted in the main body, but the original reference is broken-linked (sobrady, fix it?) and I don't recall the exact context. (update: orig ref at archive.org)
See also: http://www.devtopics.com/programmer-productivity-the-tenfinity-factor/ on programmer productivity.
So, if you do get that young rock-star programmer, odds are he won't stick around unless management makes a great effort to accommodate him.
Finally, to quote someone we all know:
"A great lathe operator commands several times the wage of an average lathe operator, but a great writer of software code is worth 10,000 times the price of an average software writer." -- Bill Gates
Footnotes
1) (I don't have to link I hope)
