Two staffers at the Park Slope Food Coop took a weeklong trip to Paris on company time — and some members of the hipster produce collective are more steamed than a pot of organic broccoli.

Co-op administrators Joe Holtz and Ann Herpel, who each rake in more than $90,000 a year to help run the Brooklyn organic grub hub, flew to the City of Light in early November to assist in setting up a similar establishment there, according to staffers and members.

And they outraged some Park Slope members when they gave a PowerPoint presentation at a general co-op meeting last week — complete with “what were effectively vacation photos,” according to one member, who asked not to be named for fear of retribution from the leadership.

The slideshow, which was viewed by roughly 300 people, included photos of French food and shopping trips to grocery stores.

“You gotta be kidding me,’’ the member fumed. “First they waste our money on their vacation, then they waste our Tuesday night gloating. It’s more than unseemly.”

Another annoyed co-op member, Daphne Bianco, added of the jaunt, “I don’t think that’s fair. The trip doesn’t really concern Brooklyn.”

Holtz and Herpel also took cabs to JFK Airport and back — trips that cost a total of $80 — on the co-op’s dime, according to members.

Herpel defended the jaunt to The Post on Sunday, saying the Parisian co-op, located in that city’s 18th Arrondissement, paid for their airfare and put them up in a private home.

“We think that we have a great thing going on here, and we think it’s wonderful. Why wouldn’t we help?” she said.

She added, ”We report regularly on what we are doing to help other co-ops. When I finished [the presentation] Tuesday, people clapped.”

The Park Slope institution, founded in 1973, has earned a reputation for its frequent boycotts of products and strict rules requiring members to show up for shift work.

Some well-heeled members have skirted the rule of having to contribute their time in exchange for reasonable prices by paying their nannies to do it, according to reports.

Phone messages left for Holtz at numbers associated with him were not returned.