As you have noted, the OCUnit test framework marks methods whose name start with 'test' as test cases. This is done at runtime
In practice, your test cases should run so fast that it should not matter how many are enabled; your debugger should be able to stop inside your test case very quickly after you press "Debug".
That being said, the quickest way to disable some tests is probably to use an #if 0 / #endif block. The feature to disable test cases dynamically does not exist in Xcode / OCUnit, since there is no GUI component.
In theory it should be doable, because at runtime (and before all tests are run) there are ways to access the test list in OCUnit, but this requires modifications to the OCUnit source code, which is not desirable (it will be wiped out in the next Xcode update, for one).
Finally, if that feature is important to you, you can easily write your own test harness that mostly replicates what OCUnit does.
Then you can tweak it to your heart's content, add UI, etc.
It is not difficult, and a little educational. Here's a good link to get you started:
http://gusmueller.com/blog/archives/2009/10/how_to_write_your_own_automated_testing_framework.html